Texas Governor Rick Perry said Thursday that he is in favor of softening penalties for pot users, touting strides his state has made towards decriminalizing marijuana use.
“As governor, I have begun to implement policies that start us toward a decriminalization,” Perry said at a World Economic Forum panel on drug legalization in Davos, Switzerland. Perry proposed the idea of alternative “drug courts” that provide treatment options and softer punishment for minor offenses.
The governor, who joined a panel that included former United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan and Colombian President Juan Manuel, pressed that states maintain the right to legalize the drug.
“States should be allowed to make those decisions,” he said.
“After 40 years of the war on drugs, I can’t change what happened in the past,” Perry said, according to the Austin American-Statesman. “What I can do as the governor of the second largest state in the nation is to implement policies that start us toward a decriminalization and keeps people from going to prison and destroying their lives, and that’s what we’ve done over the last decade.”
His spokesman Lucy Nashed confirmed to The Washington Post that Perry remains opposed to the legalization of the drug, but “has long supported diversionary and rehabilitative programs, like the drug courts we have in Texas that have proven results.”









