From the Wall Street Journal, 2/8/99

Pot Fight Unites Clinton Nemesis With The Man Who Didn't Inhale by Leslie Shaffer

WASHINGTON - Republican politicians may blame impeachment hawks like Rep. Bob Barr for disappointing results in the 1998 elections. But residents of the nation's capital have a different problem: Thanks to Mr. Barr, they still can't count some of last November's returns. Specifically, the District of Columbia is barred by law from figuring out whether city voters want to let ailing neighbors smoke marijuana to ease their pain, an idea gaining favor elsewhere in the US. Mr. Barr didn't approve of a ballot initiative on medical use of the outlaw weed. So the combative, conservative Georgia lawmaker prodded Congress, which oversees and subsidizes the District of Columbia's government, to prohibit city officials from using federal funds to count the votes. Three month later, the city and Congress are locked in a bizarre legal battle costing far more than the $500 Mr. Barr complained would be "wasted" to tabulate the ballots. The American Civil Liberties Union has sued the city elections board to force a count on behalf of local AIDS activist Wayne Turner, the initiative's sponsor. Instead of contesting the suit, the city has taken the side of the ACLU. And the Clinton administration - which doesn't agree with Mr. Barr on much of anything - has stepped in to defend the handiwork of a man who was laboring to get the president impeached even before Monica Lewinsky hit the headlines. It is a "longstanding policy of the Justice Department to defend all laws passed by Congress," department spokesman Brian Steel says. Three Justice Department employees - as well as six employees at the district's corporation counsel's office - are working on the case. Mr. Barr's vote counting ban lasts only until Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year. After that, the city will be able to use fical 2000 funds to execute the simple computer keystrokes needed to count the medical-marijuana ballots. If exit polls conducted on Election Day last November are any guide, the initiative passed handily. Of course, Congress could approve an extension of Mr. Barr's ban. If the initiative passes, federal lawmakers could also veto it. Meantime, the initiative's sponsor, Mr. Turner, endures what he calls an "agonizing" wait to find out how his initiative did at the polls. But first he must find out from Arthur Spitzer, his lawyer at the ACLU, whether he has won his court fight, and there is no date for a decision. Every time the phone rings, he says, "I feel like that '60's song: 'Let it please be him.'"