U.S. tobacco bill puts focus on menthol cigarettes
By Matthew Bigg
ATLANTA (Reuters) - The future of menthol cigarettes, smoked by 12 million Americans and 75 percent of African American smokers, could be the next flashpoint in a decades-long campaign against smoking in the United States.
Last week, Congress passed a bill giving the Food and Drug Administration the power to regulate tobacco products. President Barack Obama is expected to sign it into law soon.
The bill outlawed flavorings like chocolate, cherry and cloves that can attract young people to start smoking -- but excluded menthol, by far the most popular flavoring accounting for around 27 percent of the cigarette market.
Under the bill, the FDA must study the medical effects and marketing of menthol and its impact on blacks, Hispanics and other groups and report within 18 months. In theory, the FDA could then move to ban menthol cigarettes but some anti-smoking activists are skeptical the agency will do so.
"I am pessimistic that menthol will be banned," said Dr. Joel Nitzkin of the American Association of Public Health Physicians, who described the bill as a fraud.
Some anti-smoking groups wanted the ban on flavored cigarettes to include menthol but were told repeatedly that would kill the bill, said William Robinson of the National African American Tobacco Prevention Network.
Tobacco industry lobbyists influenced some legislators, including members of the Congressional Black Caucus, to accept what amounted to a soft compromise for menthol, he said.
"They buy influence when you have the deep pockets the tobacco industry has," Robinson said. Other anti-smoking groups denied lobbyists influenced legislators to gain a more favorable outcome for companies that produce menthol brands. Continued...



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