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You are at:Home»Business»‘The West Wing’ Freaked Out About Weed. ‘Veep’ Barely Blinked. The Evolution of Weed on Political TV
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‘The West Wing’ Freaked Out About Weed. ‘Veep’ Barely Blinked. The Evolution of Weed on Political TV

adminBy adminFebruary 28, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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'The West Wing' Freaked Out About Weed. 'Veep' Barely Blinked. The Evolution of Weed on Political TV
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Three shows, three eras: how cannabis went from a political third rail to a punchline, then to a plausible policy position.

In 2001, a career-ending scandal for a top government official was not leaking classified information or committing financial corruption. It was speaking neutrally about marijuana. Or at least, that’s how The West Wing depicted it.

The West Wing, which began airing in 1999, showcased the Bartlet administration handling issues that were politically, socially, and economically relevant. In Season 2, Episode 15 (“Ellie”), the show explores marijuana, its legalization, and the potential health effects. The episode begins when an online forum asks the Surgeon General whether she favors the decriminalization of marijuana. She responds, “It’s not for me to say. I can say marijuana poses no greater public health risk than nicotine or alcohol. It doesn’t share the same addictive properties as heroin and LSD. Yet bizarrely, to many of us in the health care profession, the law categorizes it as a Schedule 1 narcotic while putting a government seal on a pack of cigarettes.”

The White House senior staff received her statement with political panic, immediately interpreting her comments as a reversal of the official White House position against legalization. During a press conference, the Press Secretary assures reporters that “the president is 100% against legalizing drugs, including marijuana.”

Behind closed doors, the Deputy Chief of Staff confronts the Surgeon General. In response to her assertion that she carries an obligation to tell the truth, he states, “The truth is different if you’re a GP or a member of the Stanford Faculty Club than if you’re the country’s chief medical practitioner.” He notes that only 23 percent of Americans support legalization and pressures her to resign, which she refuses to do unless fired by the President himself.

Taken together, the episode treats marijuana as a third-rail topic. The Surgeon General never officially endorses legalization. She simply points out that marijuana is not a greater public health risk than legal substances. The reaction from senior staff reflects a belief that shaped the era’s politics and messaging: a top government official could not speak about marijuana in any tone other than negative without risking fallout.

Around ten years later, Parks and Recreation, another political TV show that focused on local rather than national politics, addressed marijuana. In Season 2, Episode 20 (“Summer Catalog”), the former and current directors of the Parks and Recreation Department share a meal. The current director points out how Michael, his predecessor, had constantly smoked pot while in the office and in the parks. Defending himself, Michael states, “In fairness to me, it was a different time. It was the early ’90s, but also it’s ridiculous that marijuana is illegal. Thomas Jefferson grew hemp. Alcohol is legal, but pot isn’t?”

Michael’s comments mirror the Surgeon General’s. Both point to the hypocrisy of how cannabis is treated in comparison to legal substances. The key difference between the two scenes is tone. In Parks and Recreation, the discussion of weed is humorous and inconsequential. There is no presumption that the remarks are politically dangerous. The adverse reaction is more about the general chaos of the meeting than the comments on marijuana.

While part of this shift can be chalked up to Parks and Recreation’s more lighthearted style compared to The West Wing, it also points to a broader pattern in how discussions of marijuana changed throughout the 2000s.

In Season 4, Episode 7 of Veep (“Mommy Meyer”), which aired in 2015, Senator Tom James, the vice-presidential nominee, meets with the President’s senior staff to discuss policy positions. After listing a few deliberately absurd policy proposals, he adds, “and I think we should legalize drugs.” The staff immediately laughs, with the Chief of Staff joking, “Yeah, I’ll get the bong.”

Much to the staff’s surprise, Tom plainly states that he was not joking: “I’m serious, I believe we should legalize drugs. Having seen what my son has been through, I think it’s the only way.” His son, a military veteran who suffered injury in service, is implicitly referenced as someone who would benefit from legalization.

This scene goes further than The West Wing and Parks and Recreation in how it frames legalization. Although Tom’s remarks are private, his assertion that legalization is “the only way” marks a notable shift. Unlike the institutional panic after the Surgeon General’s fact-based comments in The West Wing, or Michael’s argument in Parks and Recreation that cannabis prohibition is illogical given what society already tolerates, Tom offers no comparative justification.

Instead, Veep presents legalization as a policy position that can be defended on its own merits, based on its perceived benefits, not merely as something that only makes sense because other substances are legal. Tom does not go so far as to publicly support legalization, but the moment still reflects a changing political reality. Legalization is no longer presented as unthinkable or taboo. It becomes a serious policy proposal that can be discussed without immediate professional ruin.

The evolution in how political television has addressed legalization reflects a broader cultural and legal shift in public attitudes towards cannabis. Recreational cannabis was first legalized in Colorado and Washington in 2012, after Parks and Recreation aired its episode treating a bureaucrat smoking weed as a lighthearted situation rather than a political crisis. By the time Veep aired the episode of Tom supporting legalization in 2015, Oregon had legalized recreational cannabis, and an increasing number of states had approved marijuana for medical use.

This changing political reality made the discussion of legalization more natural and less dramatic. Fact-based statements about the medical effects of marijuana and the oddity of it being a Schedule I narcotic, which during The West Wing were treated as politically dangerous and at odds with public sentiments, became increasingly understood as part of an open policy conversation. As legalization spread across the nation, political television reflected a landscape in which cannabis was no longer a taboo topic, but an issue that fictional political leaders could discuss humorously and pragmatically.

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