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Luke "Ming" Flanagan
Luke Flanagan campaigned for the legalisation of cannabis before his election to the Dáil in February. Photograph: Julien Behal/PA
Luke Flanagan campaigned for the legalisation of cannabis before his election to the Dáil in February. Photograph: Julien Behal/PA

Cannabis-smoking Irish MP gives up drug to keep his Dáil seat

This article is more than 13 years old
Independent politician TD Luke "Ming" Flanagan said he will kick weed habit after gardaí pressure for prosecution

One of Ireland's newest and most flamboyant parliamentarians is giving up smoking cannabis so he can keep his seat in the Dáil.

Independent TD Luke "Ming" Flanagan revealed this week he is kicking the habit after rank and file gardaí called for him to be prosecuted for breaking the law.

With his pointy dark "devil beard" and ponytail, Flanagan plays on his resemblance to the tyrant Ming in Flash Gordon.

The new deputy for Roscommon-South Leitrim had campaigned for cannabis to be legalised before his election to the Dáil last month. He said he took the decision to quit smoking the drug to protect his wife and children from further media scrutiny, as well as pressure from the Garda Síochána.

"I've looked at my options. I can continue to smoke and face a six-month prison sentence and lose my seat in the Dáil, or I can stop," Flanagan said. "It is not an ideal situation, but my wife and children are the most important people on the planet to me, and I don't want my kids to witness the garda calling to the house."

He added: "The garda have to do their job. However, I will still campaign for legalisation of cannabis."

Flanagan was elected mayor of Roscommon in 2010. He first stood in a general election as a protest candidate against his then landlord, Fianna Fáil TD Frank Fahey, in 1997 in Galway West. He polled 5,000 votes in the 1999 European elections in Connacht-Ulster.

He has publicly criticised the influence of the drinks lobby and highlighted the rights of turf-cutters affected by the EU-led ban on harvesting in 32 raised bogs. He is also committed to social justice issues and local government reform.

Meanwhile, a fellow Independent TD and equally colourful Dáil member backed "Ming's" call for cannabis to be legalised. Mick Wallace, TD for Wexford, said alcohol caused far more damage in Ireland than hash.

However, Flanagan's statement that he cultivated cannabis was "a direct challenge to the law", the Garda Review magazine said. The official publication the Garda Representative Association, which represents rank and file officers was bitterly critical of Flanagan.

It said: "We now have an elected public representative of the legislative system who is publicly committed to the legalisation of cannabis and has regularly admitted in the media that he cultivates a supply for personal use. It is a direct challenge to the law and as such to the law enforcers."

The publication added: "We cannot have a situation where the law is ignored, either through appeasement or political expediency, otherwise our system of justice will become a mockery."

Ten years ago Flanagan sent 500 cannabis joints to Irish politicians as part of his campaign to legalise the drug.

This story has been corrected. Previously we said the tyrant Ming was a character in the Buck Rogers space adventures

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