Biden-Harris Administration Doubles Down on the Drug War as Senate Follows House in Extending Trump’s Class-Wide Fentanyl Ban

Press Release April 29, 2021
Media Contact

Contact:
Matt Sutton 212-613-8026
[email protected]

Washington, D.C.—In response to the Senate following the House in passing the five-month extension of the Trump Administration’s temporary class-wide emergency scheduling of fentanyl-related substances that the Biden-Harris Administration called for and urgently pushed, Grant Smith, Deputy Director of the Office of National Affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance, released the following statement:

“Despite the Biden-Harris Administration saying that we need to prioritize health-centered approaches to drugs over criminal punishments—and Biden himself apologizing for his role in the harms and racial injustices created from the tough-on-crime drug policies of the 1980s—this Trump-era ban supported by the Administration takes a page right out of that harmful playbook.  It essentially recreates the same extreme penalties and mandatory minimums that were used to address the perceived emergency around crack-cocaine use in the 1980s, this time for fentanyl.

Not only have they fast-tracked a new ramped-up era of the drug war, but even more unconscionable, they’ve done it in the immediate aftermath of a gut-wrenching trial in which attorneys for Derek Chauvin attempted to point to George Floyd’s fentanyl use as a cover for his murder. Our country needs a complete overhaul of policing, not an extension of harmful Trump-era punitive drug policies.

We cannot continue down this road, making the same mistakes of the past and ignoring the overwhelming calls for a significantly different approach. Rather, we must divest from our reliance on policing and punishment-first strategies that have consistently failed to prevent overdose deaths or reduce the supply of illicit fentanyl-related substances. And instead, we must prioritize forward-thinking, health- and evidence-based approaches—like what the S.T.O.P. Fentanyl Act calls for—that address the root cause of fentanyl-related overdoses and other associated harms.

The Biden-Harris Administration has the power to save lives—but more criminalization is not the way to do it.”

A young woman holds a sign that says "End the Drug War."

Sign up for updates from DPA.

en_USEnglish
Deadline 7/31!

It's our time to mobilize.

Election Day is around the corner… and we must be prepared to shape the national conversation about drugs. We need 250 donors to come forward before July 31!