Office of National Drug Control Policy
The
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), a component of the
Executive Office of the President of the United States, was established in 1988 by the
Anti-Drug Abuse Act. Its stated goal is to establish
policies,
priorities, and
objectives to eradicate illicit drug use,
manufacturing, and
trafficking, drug-related
crime and
violence, and drug-related
health consequences in the
United States.
The current
director of the ONDCP is
John P. Walters.
The director of the ONDCP also evaluates, coordinates, and oversees both the international and domestic anti-drug efforts of
executive branch agencies and ensures that such efforts sustain and complement State and local anti-drug activities. The Director advises the President regarding changes in the
organization,
management,
budgeting, and
personnel of
Federal Agencies that could affect the Nation's anti-drug efforts; and regarding Federal agency
compliance with their
obligations under the
Strategy.
Under the leadership of Director John P. Walters, youth drug use in America has declined by 2.8 percent over the past three years (source: Monitoring the Future survey Dec. 2004). In addition, cocaine production in Colombia has been cut every year since Plan Colombia went into effect.
In
2000, the
Federal Communications Commission, in response to a complaint by the
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, sent inquiries to five major television networks about ONDCP's practice of offering millions of additional advertising dollars to networks that embedded anti-drug messages in their programming[
1]. The House Committee on Government Reform's Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy and Human Resources held hearings on the matter on July 11, 2000[
2]. In December of that year, the FCC ruled that the networks should have identified the Office of National Drug Control Policy as the sponsor of the television programs. [
3] [
4]
In December
2002, the
Marijuana Policy Project, filed a complaint with the Nevada Secretary of State accusing the Drug Czar John Walters of illegally campaigning against its
2002 ballot initiative to decriminalize possession of up to 3 ounces of
cannabis in that state. Specifically, MPP argued that Nevada
campaign finance laws required the Drug Czar to reveal how much taxpayer money he had spent to defeat the initiative. In April
2003, the Nevada Attorney General concluded that the Drug Czar was not required to comply with Nevada's campaign finance laws. MPP filed a
writ of mandamus as an appeal of the decision. The Nevada Supreme Court issued an order declaring that MPP had "set forth issues of arguable merit" in its writ; however, on August 18,
2004, the Court declared that it was "not satisfied that [the] court's intervention by way of extraordinary relief is warranted"[
5].
A February 24,
2005 MPP press release announced that the group had filed similar complaints in
Montana,
Oregon, and
Alaska, accusing the Drug Czar of failing to make legally required campaign expense disclosures[
6]:
On October 5, 2004, the drug czar traveled to Oregon for the purpose of opposing Measure 33, a ballot measure designed to expand the state's medical marijuana program. On October 6, ONDCP Deputy Director Scott Burns traveled to Montana to campaign against Initiative 148, the medical marijuana measure passed by voters in November. And on October 13 and 14, Burns traveled to Alaska to oppose Measure 2, a measure to allow the state to tax and regulate the sale of marijuana. All of these trips were widely reported in the local press as being campaign stops in opposition to the reform initiatives.Also in
2005, the
Government Accountability Office found that the ONDCP had violated anti-
propaganda laws by preparing prepackaged news stories that did not disclose to television viewers that the government had produced them[
7]. According to Susan A. Poling, managing associate general counsel at the GAO, "What is objectionable about these is the fact the viewer has no idea their tax dollars are being used to write and produce this video segment."
ONDCP supporters such as Congressman
Tom Davis and
Mark Edward Souder have dismissed such criticism on the grounds that the ONDCP is expressly authorized by law to conduct anti-drug media campaigns.
*
1988 Anti-Drug Abuse Act*
1994 Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act*
1997 Drug-Free Communities Act *
1998 Media Campaign Act * 1998
ONDCP Reauthorization Act*
1993 Executive Order 12880 *
1996 Executive Order 12992*
1996 Executive Order 13023*
2000 Executive Order 13165*
White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP)*Lee, Christopher:
Anti-Drug Office's Videos Defended: Davis Says Ruling That Law Was Violated Is Wrong, The Washington Post, Feb. 4, 2005.
*
FCC Rules In Favor of NORML, Cannabis News, Dec. 29, 2000.
*
House Committee To Hold July 11 Hearing On ONDCP Payola Scandal; Salon.com Writer Who Broke The Story Will Face-Off Against Drug Czar, NORML, June 29, 2000.
*
MPP's first victory in "War on Drug Czar" campaign is short-lived; Nevada Supreme Court order allows Drug Czar to ignore state campaign finance laws, Marijuana Policy Project.
*
War on Drugs*
Drug Enforcement Administration*
National Institute on Drug Abuse*
Legal issues of cannabis*
Medical cannabis