Last summer, I wrote a short piece for GQ.com about the war on drugs.
According to ongoing discussions with Obama aides and associates, if the president wins a second term, he plans to tackle another American war that has so far been successful only in perpetuating more misery: the four decades of The Drug War.
Don't expect miracles. There is very little the president can do by himself. And pot-smokers shouldn't expect the president to come out in favor of legalizing marijuana. But from his days as a state senator in Illinois, Obama has considered the Drug War to be a failure, a conflict that has exacerbated the problem of drug abuse, devastated entire communities, changed policing practices for the worse, and has led to a generation of young children, disproportionately black and minority, to grow up in dislocated homes, or in none at all.
So: Last week, with several days to go before the start of his second term and no mention of the Drug War as an immediate White House priority, a few writers who want to see big policy changes are using the silence to bemoan the apparent absence of that issue in the mindspace of the White House, and by implication, suggest that my "unsourced" piece, which was largely a review of a documentary, was wrong.
Now, we are less than a day into the president's second term, and golly, he still hasn't done or said anything about drugs. Instead, he's loading his plate with issues like immigration reform. To my equally "unsourced" critics, this means he intends to do nothing about sentencing, or policing, or drug-abuse treatment.
I stand by what I wrote. Read it again. Nothing vague or intentionally opaque. Several Obama advisers told me that he wants to tackle the drug problem at some point during his second term, and nothing has changed. I would be surprised, and chagrined, and apologetic to readers, if, at the end of the term, Obama has done nothing. He has four years ahead of him. I understand the frustration of drug reformers. They will have to wait. The politics are shifting on drugs, but they're still optically difficult for a black president. Timing matters.
Marc Ambinder is TheWeek.com's editor-at-large, and writes The Compass blog. He is the author, with D.B. Grady, of The Command and Deep State: Inside the Government Secrecy Industry. Marc is also a contributing editor for The Atlantic and GQ. Formerly, he served as White House correspondent for National Journal, chief political consultant for CBS News, and politics editor at The Atlantic. Marc is a 2001 graduate of Harvard. He is married to Michael Park, a corporate strategy consultant, and lives in Los Angeles.
- What is a quantum computer — and why does Google need one?
- The politics behind Kanye West's 'New Slaves'
- 32 TV shows to watch in 2013 [Updated]
- LIVE UPDATES: Massive tornado tears through Oklahoma City area
- D.C. is obsessed with scandal. America isn't.
- WATCH: Jon Stewart hates everyone in Washington now
- Game of Thrones recap: 'Second Sons'
- 5 ways the Samsung Galaxy S4 stunned an iPhone user
- Girls on Film: The real problem with the Disney Princess brand
- Why babies in every country on Earth say 'mama'
- The politics behind Kanye West's 'New Slaves'
- LIVE UPDATES: Massive tornado tears through Oklahoma City area
- Angry at the government? 5 ways you can fight back
- What is a quantum computer — and why does Google need one?
- The time's not right for Tesla
- Why poverty is growing faster in the suburbs than in the city
- Why the Justice Department spied on a Fox News reporter
- D.C. is obsessed with scandal. America isn't.
- 'Crazy ants' invade the U.S. Southeast: What you should know
- Croatia's land mine–detecting honey bees













