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Making cannabis legal would help fight crime says ex Tory councillor and health chief
Making cannabis legal would help fight crime says ex Tory councillor and health chief

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Making cannabis legal would help fight crime says ex Tory councillor and health chief

The debate over decriminalising cannabis is back on the agenda following a report by the London Drugs Commission, which is says that possessing small amounts of the drug should not be illegal. Chaired by Lord Charlie Falconer, the LDC found current laws are 'disproportionate to the harms it can pose'. Former Conservative county councillor for Stonehouse Nick Housden, who also served as cabinet member for public health, has strong views on the issue. Here he argues that the Class B drugs should be legalised IF I told you there was one policy that could save the UK billions, help the police do their job, destroy criminal drug networks, raise enough in tax to fund real public services, and even make cannabis use safer, you'd probably think I'd lost the plot. Or, depending on your tabloid of choice, you might think I was stoned. But here I am - entirely sober - telling you that legalising cannabis is not only sensible, it's long overdue. And frankly, it's madness that we're still talking about it like it's some radical idea. Because right now, the UK government is spending billions fighting a war on cannabis that it's already lost - and was never going to win. You're not just witnessing failure, you're paying for it. Let's start with the numbers. The UK burns through about £1.6 billion a year on drug law enforcement, a huge portion of which is devoted to cannabis. Even more frightening is the £5.5 billion wasted in our courts addressing these 'crimes'. So that's actually £7.1 billion total every year. That's police time, court costs, prison space — all to chase down people who, let's be honest, are often just trying to relax without pouring alcohol down their neck. And it's not like we're getting results. Cannabis is widely available in every town and city in the UK. The only difference is that, under our current system, it's sold by dealers — not regulated businesses — and users have no idea what they're buying or what's actually in it. It is easier for our schoolchildren to get stoned than it is to buy cans of cider, something I partook in occasionally myself! Meanwhile, our government is penny-pinching on PIP, winter fuel payments, and other vital lifelines for working families. Ministers are happy to claw back £300 from a vulnerable pensioner, but think nothing of blowing £10 billion on giving away the Chagos Islands, only to rent them back like mugs at a dodgy timeshare seminar. Imagine if we flipped the script: legalise cannabis, tax it sensibly, and use the revenue to fund the services we keep being told we 'can't afford.' In the US, states like Colorado and California have brought in billions in cannabis tax — money used for healthcare, education, even addiction services. It is no surprise that in the Netherlands their strategy towards legalisation of cannabis has seen relatively low hard drug use compared to other countries, because they can actually focus resources on stopping it instead of wasting their time on cannabis enforcement. We could be doing the same. Instead, we're locking people up and letting the proceeds of Britain's booming weed market go straight to criminal gangs. Because that makes sense. Every year, tens of thousands of people in the UK are criminalised for cannabis possession. That's more than a third of all drug offences. These aren't kingpins or cartel members — they're often young, working-class people trying to unwind on a Friday night. And they end up with criminal records that can mess up jobs, travel, even relationships. Meanwhile, the real crooks - the organised networks trafficking cocaine and meth, laundering money and exploiting people - are laughing all the way to the bank. Our police forces are forced to juggle the impossible: low resources, shrinking headcounts, and a rising tide of serious crime. As someone who spent years working with police and health officials as a councillor and later as cabinet member for public health in Gloucestershire (a short tenure, but I lasted longer than Liz!) I saw how bad the pressure is. Officers are constantly being pulled in all directions, dealing with mental health crises, missing persons, knife crime - and yes, cannabis users too. If we took cannabis off their plate, they could actually focus on what matters. That's not radical - it's just common sense. A legal cannabis market would deal a massive blow to the criminal gangs who control the UK's supply. You want to undercut a black market - beat it on quality, price and convenience. It worked for tobacco and alcohol and it would work for cannabis. At the same time, we'd bring in huge tax revenue. Experts estimate the UK could rake in over £1 billion a year from legal cannabis - even before you count the savings from not enforcing pointless laws. That's money we could use to reverse police cuts, fund mental health services and fix potholes. This isn't about encouraging drug use it's about recognising reality. Estimates show we have over 2.5 million active cannabis users in the UK. The question is do we want them to get it from a gang leader in a hoodie, or a licensed, regulated shop with a receipt?

Labour minister hits out at Sadiq Khan's call for cannabis law reform
Labour minister hits out at Sadiq Khan's call for cannabis law reform

The Independent

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • The Independent

Labour minister hits out at Sadiq Khan's call for cannabis law reform

A Labour minister has rejected Sir Sadiq Khan 's calls for the partial decriminalisation of cannabis, stating that the government's stance 'remains unchanged'. London 's mayor backed a report by the London Drugs Commission (LDC), which recommends that natural cannabis be removed from the Misuse of Drugs Act. The LDC, set up by Sir Sadiq in 2022 and chaired by former lord chancellor Lord Charlie Falconer, found the current laws on cannabis were 'disproportionate to the harms it can pose' following a study of how the drug is policed around the world. Housing minister Matthew Pennycook said that whilst the London mayor is 'entitled to his view on the matter', there is no intention to reclassify the class B drug.

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