- Legalise Cannabis Alliance
The Legalise Cannabis Alliance (LCA) [ [http://www.lca-uk.org/ Legalise Cannabis Alliance website] ] is a pressure group based in the
United Kingdom campaigning for the legalisation ofcannabis for all purposes, including medicinal andrecreation aldrug use. It was formed inNorwich in 1992 with name "Campaign to Legalise Cannabis International". From 1999 to 2006, with the name "Legalise Cannabis Alliance", it was a registeredpolitical party , withAlun Buffry as its leader, fielding candidates in elections to the House of Commons of theParliament of the United Kingdom and to local government councils.The party used a cannabis leaf image as its emblem, and "Cannabis : legalise and utilise" (ISBN 0-9535693-1-4) served as its election manifesto. The manifesto takes at face value
Jack Herer 's claims in "The Emperor Wears No Clothes ", 1994, (ISBN 0-9524560-0-1), about the potential of cannabis as a source of renewablefuel .History
The party was registered in March 1999, [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/special_report/1999/02/99/e-cyclopedia/670401.stm "Namesakes: A close call in politics", BBC News, 8 March 2000, accessed 21 July 2008] ] after
Howard Marks had stood as a legalise cannabis candidate in four different constituencies in the 1997 general election: Norwich North, Norwich South, Southampton Test and Neath. In the same general election Buster Nolan described himself as the "New Millennium, New Way, Legalise Cannabis" candidate in the Braintree constituency.The first official LCA candidate in a parliamentary election was Colin Paisley in the November 1999 byelection in Kensington and Chelsea. He took 141 (0.7%) of the votes. The second was Derrick Large in the May 2000 Romsey byelection, who took 417 (1.1%) of the votes. [www.election.demon.co.uk]
In the 2001 general election the party had candidates in 13 constituencies. Their best result was in Workington, where John Peacock took 1040 (2.5%) of the votes.
In January 2004 cannabis prohibition in the UK was relaxed. Cannabis had been a "class B" substance under the
Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 : it became a "class C" substance. Many people saw this change as virtual 'decriminalisation'In the 2005 general election the LCA contested 21 constituencies. This was eight more than in the 2001 general election, but included only six that had been contested in that previous election. In all these six constituencies the LCA suffered a fall in its share of the vote, and the average share across 21 constituencies was well down from that across the previous 13. Their best results were in Orkney and Shetland, Worthing East and Shoreham and Leigh. In Orkney and Shetland, Paul Cruickshank took 1.8% of the votes. Thomas Hampson in Leigh and Chris Baldwin in Worthing East and Shoreham both took 1.5% of the votes.
The party voted to de-register at a conference in Norwich on November 11, 2006, and to continue as a pressure group.
Election results
Top Gear appearance
In 2002/3 the legalise cannabis campaigners raised awareness by simulating fake election on Top Gear where the new prime minister was to be decided by a race around a track, the candidate came second out of 6 and behind the
Liberal Democrats See also
*
British Legalise Cannabis Campaigns
*Cannabis
*Cannabis (drug)
*Cannabis reclassification in the United Kingdom
*Industrial hemp
*Legalise cannabis parties
*Legal issues of cannabis
*Medical cannabis Notes and references
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