"But a group of Senate conservatives argued passionately against the measure. They offered a substitute that proposed reward instead of penalties - a 5 percent increase in highway safety funds for states that set the drinking age at 21 and another 5 percent increase for states that enacted mandatory sentencing for drunken drivers. Their proposal was rejected by 62 to 35."
- American Journalist Martin Tolchin, 1984
“Why the magic age of 21? Why not 25? How about 30, 35, 40?”
- Democratic Senator of Vermont, Patrick Leahy, 1998
Sen John J. Marchi. Courtesy of Static Wikia
"State Senator John J. Marchi said today that Mr. Reagan's approval of the drinking- age law was merely a ''Little Prohibition.’’
- ALBANY, July 17 (UPI)
Prior to the National Minimum Drinking Age Act of 1984, states across the nation opposed newly passed state laws that raised minimum drinking age. This attitude set a precedent for how people would react to the national law soon to be enacted.
“Caught between representing what they perceived as their constituents' views or voting their consciences (...) Maryland senators opted to go with 'the people,’ at least in an election year”
- Political Journalist Keith B. Richburg, 1984