![]() by Zach Wahls |
COMMENTARY
Amid last week’s brouhaha over Mitt Romney’s tax returns, staunch conservative Tom Tancredo endorsed the legalization of marijuana in Colorado.
Tancredo’s support for Amendment 64, a proposed state constitutional amendment to regulate the drug much like alcohol, came as a surprise to many given his boisterous reputation as a longtime Republican lawmaker. Yet, his departure from GOP orthodoxy is hardly unique. He joins a growing list of prominent Republicans who support ending the drug war, including libertarians Ron Paul and former New Mexico governor Gary Johnson, and even conservative evangelical Pat Robertson.
In writing of his support for Amendment 64, Tancredo said: “I am endorsing Amendment 64 not despite my conservative beliefs, but because of them.” (Meanwhile, support for Amendment 64 is up by 11 points, according to a recent poll by Survey USA and The Denver Post.)
As schisms form within the Republican Party on various social issues, including marijuana and gay marriage, Democrats must be willing to reach out to the disaffected and moderates to build coalitions around ballot initiatives and non-conventional candidates. These coalitions can lay the groundwork for electing preferential, if not ideologically pure, Democratic candidates in conventionally Republican parts of the country.
This isn’t to say that former congressman Tancredo or Johnson are going to be running for office as Democrats any time soon. They won’t. But the people who support these men aren’t necessarily going to be the conventional GOP rank-and-file voters that the national party would like them to be.
The widely circulated “GOP purity test” from 2009 that would have barred moderate (and even conservative) Republican candidates from receiving funding—and would have disqualified Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush—was one of the many signs of the collapsing of “Big Tent” thinking from the right. The issue of marijuana legalization, however, might be the match that sets the entire tent ablaze.
There are few issues that pitch hard-right social conservatives against their socially moderate to liberal libertarian counterparts in such clear terms. It is hard to find a self-identified libertarian who today supports the continued prohibition of marijuana. For libertarians, the issue is a principled one: do we trust informed citizens to govern their own lives and claim responsibility for their decisions, or do we cede that decision-making power to government?









