As a teenager, Obama took drugs including marijuana and cocaine
Obama's Candid Confession About Teen Drug Use
Long before he became the 44th President of the United States, Barack Obama made a confession that would have ended most political careers: he used drugs as a teenager. In his 1995 memoir Dreams from My Father, Obama wrote candidly about smoking marijuana and using cocaine during his high school years in Hawaii in the 1970s.
Obama described how he "would push questions of who I was out of my mind" through substances. He mostly smoked pot and drank alcohol, but occasionally would snort cocaine when he could afford it—or as he put it, "maybe a little blow." The admission was remarkably frank for someone launching a political career.
A Rare Political Gamble
When Obama published his memoir, he was preparing to run for Illinois Senate. At the time, it was almost unheard of for a candidate for public office to admit to any drug use, let alone cocaine. Political consultants would have considered it career suicide.
But Obama's honesty became part of his appeal. Rather than hiding his past, he owned it. The confession appeared in a book about identity, race, and finding himself—a narrative that resonated with voters who valued authenticity over the usual political polish.
The Confession That Didn't Hurt
Surprisingly, Obama's drug admission didn't derail either of his presidential campaigns. Political analysts noted that those offended by the revelation were likely never going to vote for him anyway. Meanwhile, his candor may have actually helped him connect with voters tired of carefully scripted politicians.
Obama has continued to reference his past drug use throughout his presidency, particularly when discussing criminal justice reform. In 2013, when announcing more lenient sentences for drug offenders, he acknowledged his own history: he could have ended up in prison himself if he'd been caught and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
The Hawaii teenager who once used drugs to "flatten out the landscape of my heart" became the leader of the free world—a journey that would have seemed impossible to predict at the time.