Dagga Party

Dagga Party
isiXhosa name Iqela Lentsango
Leader Jeremy Acton
Founded February 2009 (2009-02)
Ideology Cannabis legalisation
Website
daggaparty.org.za

Iqela Lentsango: The Dagga Party of South Africa (more commonly known as the Dagga Party) is a South African political party founded in February 2009 by Jeremy Acton, who remains the party's leader. "Dagga" is a South African colloquial term for cannabis, the legalisation of which forms the core of the party's platform.[1] The Dagga Party was established to allow voters who support the legalisation of dagga to have representation in elections.[2]

The party failed to register with the Independent Electoral Commission in order to contest the 2014 South African general election,[3] missing the deadline because the required R200,000 registration fee could not be raised in time.[4]

The party's position is that cannabis users should have the same rights as people who use tobacco and alcohol.[5]

Acton was one of the people responsible for bringing the case before a South African court which resulted in the partial decriminalisation of dagga in South Africa.[6]

References

  1. Glynnis Underhill (10 May 2013). "Dagga Party: Eight joints a day for Cape politician". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  2. Mitchley, Alex. "Dagga Party’s election hopes up in smoke". The Citizen. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  3. Sithole, Sthembiso (2014-03-26). "Many minor parties won’t make it to Parliament: Analyst". SABC.
  4. Davis, Gaye. "Dagga Party misses election deadline". Eyewitness News. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  5. Collins, Farren. "People jailed for dagga should be released‚ court hears". Times LIVE. Retrieved 2016-12-18.
  6. Hendricks, Ashraf (2017-05-06). "“We want the right to carry cannabis in our pockets like a person can carry cigarettes”". Ground Up. Retrieved 2017-05-07.
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