Law & Politics

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is widely expected to cruise to an easy victory in the Democratic primary on September 9, despite festering influence-peddling scandals, despite his embrace of corporate benefactors, and despite his lackluster support for the ever-popular medical marijuana. He faces only one traditional challenger, Fordham University law professor Zephyr Teachout.

credico nation ad - Comedian Randy Credico's Deadly Serious Quest to Run NY, Source: http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2014/aug/12/randy_credico_campaign

Credico campaign ad in The Nation magazine

But he also faces the insurgent candidacy of comedian, satirist, political gadfly, and perennial candidate Randy Credico, who bills himself as “the most progressive candidate since FDR” and who is running on an anti-corporate and pro-drug reform platform. That’s nothing new for Credico, who has long been active in the Rockefeller drug law repeal movement, the prison reform movement, and other progressive social movements.
Cuomo’s father built 37 prisons, Teachout’s father [a judge] sends people to prison, my father went to prison — I know what it does to families,” Credico said, beginning to sketch out not only the policy differences but the life experiences that sets him apart from the other contenders.

Credico’s father did 10 years in Ohio for a nonviolent offense, the candidate explained.

Credico lays out his platform on the home page of his campaign web site, and it is the stuff of a populist backlash to both overweening corporate control and the state’s alive-and-kicking prison/law enforcement industrial complex.

Keeping to the FDR comparison, he calls for “A New Deal for New York” to “Tax Wall Street, Not Main Street,” bring “Benefits for the average person,” “Clean up City Hall and policing,” and “Build infrastructure to create jobs.” The platform calls for taxes on the sales of stocks, bonds, and derivatives, income-based real estate taxes, and a more progressive income tax, as well as raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour, lowering subway fares and other transit tolls, and providing Medicare for all.

But his drug policy platform is also something to behold, and goes well beyond the baby steps taken by even the most progressive mainstream politicians. His criminal justice planks include:

  • legalize marijuana
  • close Attica prison
  • ban racial profiling and end stop and frisk
  • end the Rockefeller drug laws
  • direct election of all criminal judges
credico-header_0 - Comedian Randy Credico's Deadly Serious Quest to Run NY, Source: http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2014/aug/12/randy_credico_campaign

The Candidate (credico2014.com)

“I’m for decriminalizing all drugs and legalizing marijuana,” Credico told the Chronicle Monday. “I’m not sure if the state is ready for legalizing cocaine and heroin, but I can’t believe methadone is better than heroin. We ought to be transforming Rikers Island from a penal colony to a center for job training, education, and treatment. When Attica exploded, there were only 10,000 people in the state prison system; now there are 10,000 on Rikers alone.”

[Editor’s Note: The 1971 Attica state prison riot left 43 people dead, including 10 guards, and was a spark for the prisoners’ rights movement of the 1970s.]

Although the draconian Rockefeller drug laws have been reformed in recent years and the prison population has declined somewhat — from an all-time high of 95,000 at the end of 2006 to just over 81,000 at the end of June — there are still more than 10,000 people serving prison time for drug offenses, or, as Credico notes, more than there were people in prison for anything 40 years ago.

“This is happening under the purview of Democrats,” he said. “Attorney General Eric Schneiderman walked with us against the Rockefeller laws, but he’s been captured by the powers that be and has ignored any calls for further reform, not just of the drug laws, but also of odious prison conditions.”

Once upon a time, political candidates had to deny ever having smoked marijuana. Then, one famously denied ever having inhaled. Now, they admit to having used, but brush it off as a youthful indiscretion from their wild school days. Not Credico.

I’ve admitted being a pot smoker,” he said. “Not every day, but it’s been good for me. I smoked and I inhaled, and I believe marijuana is better for you than e-cigs. People should have access to it. It’s better than drinking or doing blow,” he added.

But Credico even argues that he should have the right to do blow, if that’s what he wants to do.

“I can eat Ritalin, I can gobble down all those pharmaceuticals, but if somebody shows up with some pure Bolivian, I want to try that. That’s against the law? Who is responsible for that, and who is enforcing it? Nobody gives a shit if I smoke a joint or do a line,” he declared.

credico ny society ethical culture - Comedian Randy Credico's Deadly Serious Quest to Run NY, Source: http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/2014/aug/12/randy_credico_campaign

at a forum at the New York Society for Ethical Culture (credico2014.com)

Of course, that could be because Credico is a middle-aged white guy. But New York City, Credico’s home, is infamous for its arrests of tens of thousands of young black and brown city residents each year on marijuana charges, and Credico, of course, is aware of that.

“All the kids I see getting arrested are black. It’s against the law to smoke pot — if you’re black,” he scoffed.

“They arrest 50,000 kids for smoking pot, but I smoked it at the state capitol, and they wouldn’t arrest me,” he said. “We have 55,000 homeless people in this city, 20,000 homeless kids. Just think what we could do if marijuana was legal and taxed and we used it to rebuild the infrastructure and create low-cost housing. Instead, we keep arresting brown and black kids.”

Credico’s campaign is low-budget, but he’s using tactics honed by years of activism to get his message out. He travels to events throughout the city and state and works crowds — many of whom already know him from his years of activism around prison issues.

“I’m focusing on the projects; that’s where I’m getting my support,” he said. “People are tired of the marijuana arrests, the abuse by police. We need a state law banning racial profiling. We’re supposed to be the guiding light of the nation, and we don’t have a racial profiling law.”

Credico is using social media to the best advantage he can. He’s produced an award-winning documentary, Sixty Spins Around the Sun, to explain how he’s gotten to the point where he’s spending his 60th year trying to unseat a powerful incumbent governor, and he’s got a Facebook campaign page.

Over the weekend, he penned a piece for the Huffington Post, “Is New York Ready for a Governor Who’s Ready to Inhale?”, but when it comes to mainstream media attention, he feels like the Rodney Dangerfield of New York politics.

“I don’t get no respect,” he intoned. “I’m running against two people from the ruling class.”

But at least he was on his way to do an interview with NY1, one of the city’s 24-hour cable news channels. And the campaign continues.

Article republished from Stop the Drug War under Creative Commons Licensing