http://www.salon.com/politics/feature/2001/04/20/drug_czar/index.html



Bush's new drug czar?
John Walters, a hard-line drug warrior, is the leading candidate to replace
Barry McCaffrey. Advocates say he's a throwback to the bad old days of Bill
Bennett.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Daniel Forbes
April 20, 2001 | John Walters, a hard-liner who was former drug czar William
Bennett's deputy during the first Bush administration, has emerged as the
leading candidate to become director of the Office of National Drug Control
Policy, according to a knowledgeable drug policy source.
The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that three reliable
sources, including one in the White House, told him on Thursday that Walters
was likely to be chosen to head the drug office. The White House declined to
comment on the report.
Walters is a self-proclaimed hawk on drug policy matters who has been
strongly critical of the Clinton administration's execution of the drug war.
At the ONDCP, he was responsible for developing enforcement policy and
coordinating attempts to reduce the supply of banned drugs. The
Bennett-Walters drug office was characterized by widespread use of the bully
pulpit to issue harsh moral condemnations of users of illegal drugs, little
distinction between marijuana and drugs like heroin and cocaine and an
emphasis on punishment over rehabilitation.
Walters and Bennett also made a decision to stop the longtime practice of
representing drug use as a health matter, arguing that doing so made drug
users too sympathetic. In his 1996 book on the drug wars, "Up in Smoke," Dan
Baum quotes Walters as saying, "The health people say 'no stigma,' and I'm
for stigma." Baum writes that Walters "took the position that marijuana,
cocaine and heroin 'enslave people' and 'prevent them from being free
citizens' in a way that tobacco and alcohol do not."
Walters' appointment would end a three-month period during which the ONDCP
functioned without a director. The office's former director, Gen. Barry
McCaffrey, resigned on Jan. 6.
Walters was a coauthor, with Bennett and John DiIulio (who was recently named
by President Bush to head the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community
Initiatives), of the 1997 book "Body Count: Moral Poverty and How to Win
America's War Against Crime and Drugs," which warned of a coming wave of
"superpredators" and called for longer sentences and more arrests.
Walters, who has taught political science at several universities, is
president of the conservative group The New Citizenship Project, which
advocates an enhanced role for religion in American public life.
Allen St. Pierre, the executive director of the NORML Foundation, a drug
reform organization, said "NORML and myself are very disappointed by this
selection. We'd hoped that the Bush administration would turn away from the
hyperbolic, table-thumping approach of Walters and his mentor, William
Bennett, which was one of the most destructive periods in public policy in
the last 30 years. Walters equates moral turpitude with drug use, and I'm
afraid he'll increase the harsh rhetoric coming out of the drug office's
bully pulpit."
St. Pierre added that the selection of hard-liner Walters made it unlikely
that a higher percentage of the drug office's $22 billion budget would be
spent on treatment and education, as opposed to enforcement and interdiction.
"Under Nixon, the ratio was 50-50. Under Clinton, who was extremely hard-line
on drug war enforcement although he didn't use the bully pulpit as much as
Walters would like, that ratio went up to 75-25."

Reply via email to