Playgrounds would become ‘crack dens’ under Green Party, says policing minister

Playgrounds would become “crack dens” if the Greens were in charge of drugs policy, the policing minister has warned.
Sarah Jones described the Green Party’s position as “reckless”, as she and Zack Polanski traded blows ahead of a by-election in Greater Manchester next week.
Mr Polanski has called for a “public health approach” to drug-taking, warning that “the war on drugs is failing”.
He told the Press Association that Labour figures should not “make this a cheap, stupid game where people continue to die”.
The Green Party has previously campaigned to decriminalise drug possession, pointing people who face harms towards addiction, housing, employment and health support.
In 2024, the party proposed setting up a “regulated market” for drugs “that stops criminal supply and profiteering, and that reduces harm including by preventing children accessing drugs”.
But “these reckless plans would shatter communities across the country and tear apart the very fabric of Britain”, according to Ms Jones.
She added: “Polanski would unleash a drugs epidemic across Britain that would see our parks and playgrounds turned into crack dens.
“Let’s be clear about what that would mean – lives shattered, anti-social behaviour through the roof, and public drug use running rife.
“It’s deeply irresponsible to even suggest this idea and its families and young people in our communities who’d pay a very heavy price.
“Drug seizures are at a record high with Labour, as we tackle drug-related organised crime while investing billions in drug prevention and treatment.
“This is a common-sense approach to keep our communities safe and keep drugs off our streets.”
Hannah Spencer, the Green Party’s Gorton and Denton by-election candidate, has previously said she thought “decriminalising is a conversation that we need to have”, in an interview with the BBC.
She and Reform UK’s Matthew Goodwin are vying to topple the 13,413 majority which Labour won in 2024, with Labour’s Angeliki Stogia defending it in next Thursday’s poll.
Speaking outside his campaign’s headquarters in Gorton, Mr Polanski told PA: “For the Labour Government to be playing political games with people’s lives is totally unacceptable and what I think it speaks to, in places like Manchester, are why people are sick of the old establishment politics.
“They’re seeing people who aren’t taking issues seriously, who aren’t doing the things that need to be done to protect people, to take a public health approach, to make sure that children absolutely can’t go anywhere near drugs.
“Right now, children can often get drugs if they want – that’s a completely unacceptable situation.
“That’s why I’m saying very clearly, I want to legalise, regulate and control drugs and that’s a public health approach by public health professionals.”
Green Party leader Mr Polanski also said Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and the UK Government seemed “to be shouting lies about the Green Party”.
He said: “Take alcohol, for instance – we regulate it because we know it’s dangerous if anyone can get it, any time, and so it should be the same with drugs, taking a public health approach.
“It’s not about saying it should be fully accessible to everyone.
“It’s recognising that the war on drugs is failing.
“That’s not a contentious thing to say.
“All around the world when people have tried to have the same policy we’ve had with drugs, it hasn’t worked, and it’s not worked in this country.
“What I’m talking about, and this has been tried various ways around the world, including places like Portugal, where it’s reduced drug deaths, reduced HIV transmissions, and reduced what’s often labelled as antisocial behaviour, rather than allowing drugs to be in the hands of drug gangs or to be on the black market or in the streets.
“What you’re actually saying is, if someone has a problematic relationship with drugs, then they should go to a public health expert or someone in the National Health Service to get the expert help and advice that they need.”
Mr Polanski later added: “I’m saying, let’s have a sensible, evidence-based approach, led by health professionals, led by drug experts and let’s not make this a cheap, stupid game where people continue to die.”
In Oregon, US, the state legislature decriminalised the possession of small amounts of hard drugs in 2020, but rowed back almost two years ago.
Research by OPB (Oregon Public Broadcasting) showed the number of people who died from an overdose in the state more than doubled between 2020 and late 2023, many as a result of fentanyl use.
According to the Labour Party, the Greens’ proposal could lead to a doubling of drug deaths and open drug use in public spaces.
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Perhaps the policining minister should have a look at Portugal, who decriminalised drug use about 25 years ago, and started treating it as a health issue.
Far less crime, and a drop in drug use and addiction. No crack dens in their playgrounds as far as i could see on any of my visits.
Not true. Whilst there was a slight decrease in death rate after decriminalisation in Portugal, the problem got worse over the following years with a death rate much higher than before decimalisation. The NHS already provides a ‘medical emphasis’ to users in Wales.
That oft-repeated quote about the definition of insanity – repeating exactly the same actions and expecting different results – is appropriate here. We’ve treated drug abuse as a purely criminal justice issue for decades and the outcome has always been that the situation is, at best, unchanged. Without a radical change in how we manage drug abuse, namely treating it as a public health issue, then the same outcomes of unchecked addiction will continue. It’s a waste of human life and, seemingly more important to the clowns on the political right, a waste of money. Farming out policy decisions of… Read more »
Treating “drug abuse as a purely criminal justice issue for decades” is evidently not true. Medical escape route was a consideration in the penalties provided by the Misuse Of Drugs Act when formulated and the classification of substances is reviewed annually ever since. The logic of decriminalising hard drugs could also be applied to the sale and consumption of tobacco in under 18s, it’s banned for health reasons, there are criminal penalties.
Our local playground is already a dumping ground for drug paraphernalia. The current system does not work and scare tactics like this just make the Government look ridiculous.
Sorry, Ms Jones, but hysterical claims like “would see our parks and playgrounds turned into crack dens” don’t undermine Polanski, they just make you sound like a deeply unserious politician.
The ‘legalise drugs’ pundits often quite Portugal as an example, however, whilst there was a slight decrease in associated deaths after the 2001 decriminalisation, the following years saw an acceleration in problem with the death rate in 2023 being double that of before. For many drug users arrest and prosecution can be an important gateway to escape addiction. As for the ‘medical emphasis’ promoted by the Greens and Arfon Jones when PCC for Plaid Cymru, this already exists in Wales. The NHS already provides such a ‘no questions asked’ pathways of treatment and assistance.
The EMCDDA’s own data shows drug‑related deaths fell from 369 in 2000 to around 50–70 a year in the 2020s, which is an 80% drop, not a rise, and nowhere near “double pre‑2001.” There’s no dataset showing a 2023 spike like that.
The idea that prosecution is a “gateway” to treatment doesn’t match the evidence either. After decriminalisation, more people entered treatment, not fewer (SICAD reports treatment numbers rising from ~23k in 1999 to ~38k by 2008).
Wales does have NHS treatment, but it doesn’t have Portugal’s full system, like the Dissuasion Commissions that guarantee rapid, non‑criminal referral.
Period Dataset.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/911927/drug-overdose-deaths-in-portugal/
Latest year data.
https://www.portugalresident.com/overdose-deaths-increase-by-16-cocaine-is-drug-most-responsible-for-mortality-in-portugal/
I don’t think the Labour Party is fit to lecture anyone on the welfare of children given Mandelson’s dodgy connections
Certainly not in Wales, oh dear we forgot our 6th form pupils. Are they all clones of Smiles on the government’s benches…
The Three R’s: Health, Employment and Education…
Labour really are struggling aren’t they.