US Long-awaited ban on menthol cigarettes could be delayed into 2024, public health groups fear - They know Biden loses the black vote if he bans menthols, so they will lollygag until after Nov 2024

Long-awaited ban on menthol cigarettes could be delayed into 2024, public health groups fear
NBC News (archive.ph)
By Erika Edwards and Sara G. Miller
2023-12-01 23:34:05GMT

The long-awaited ban on menthol cigarettes may not be announced by the end of the year, but pushed to 2024, according to officials from two national public health groups working to remove the products from the market.

Both requested anonymity to discuss the decision ahead of any announcement from the Biden administration. The delay could be announced as early as next week, they suggested.

Officials from the public health groups worry that the ban may be punted well into next year, perhaps even after the November presidential election.

One of the officials was “deeply concerned” that the ban would not be put into place before the 2024 election.

“Everything gets harder to do in an election year because people are distracted and bandwidth is stretched,” the official said.

The White House declined to comment.

A ban on menthol cigarettes has been in the works for more than a decade. A 2013 citizen petition prompted the Food and Drug Administration to ban menthol as a flavor in cigarettes, but rules to finalize a ban have been sluggish.

In January, Brian King, the director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products, said the agency was committed to completing the rulemaking process for the ban in 2023. The FDA went on to miss its own self-imposed deadline of August.

Menthol use predominantly affects people of color.

Nearly 85% of Black smokers use menthols, compared to 30% of white smokers, according to the FDA. Black men and women are far less likely than white Americans to be diagnosed with lung cancer at an earlier stage, when the disease is often more treatable. Black men have the highest lung cancer death rate in the U.S.

Public health groups such as the American Lung Association and the American Heart Association have been vocal about the need for an end to menthol tobacco products.

“The American Lung Association expects the White House to honor President Biden’s commitment to end cancer as we know it through the Cancer Moonshot,” said Erika Sward, assistant vice president for national advocacy at the American Lung Association. It “cannot be achieved unless the White House finalizes” rules banning menthol products.

“Removing these products from the market is backed by strong scientific evidence and hundreds of thousands of public comments from the public health community nationwide,” said Nancy Brown, chief executive officer for the American Heart Association. “The administration should not delay further in putting these rules into effect.”

On Friday, the Food and Drug Administration said that finalizing rules to ban menthol tobacco products “remains a top priority.”

“Final rules such as these go through an extensive rulemaking process, including agency review and consideration of public comments, development of the final rule, and subsequent review by the Department of Health and Human Services and the White House Office of Management and Budget,” an FDA spokesperson said. The OMB has posted the final rules, which is considered the last step before the bans are finalized.

The Biden administration has been conducting ongoing meetings to discuss the issue with the tobacco industry and public health groups.

Menthol cigarettes are notoriously addictive. When inhaled, the menthol produces a cooling sensation in the throat, reducing the irritation of nicotine and the harsh taste of cigarettes, essentially making the cigarettes easier to smoke.

Menthols are also difficult to quit. Menthol smokers successfully quit at lower rates than nonmenthol smokers, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“People are dying. This will save lives. We have the science and data to prove it,” one official said. “It is long past time to take these products off the market.”
 
Suprisingly I've also found that menthol cigarettes, specifically the type with the menthol capsule in it you burst before smoking are also the cigarette of choice in Korea.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Lady Adjani
That takes care of that...

Biden Delays Ban on Menthol Cigarettes
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Christina Jewett and Noah Weiland
2024-04-26 19:19:47GMT
The Biden administration said on Friday that it was delaying a decision on whether to ban menthol cigarettes as federal officials take more time to consider the move.

The White House has faced considerable opposition from the big tobacco companies that could lose billions of dollars from the move. But the proposal has also posed risks for President Biden in an election year because of his weakening support among Black voters, some of whom view it as heavy-handed.

“This rule has garnered historic attention, and the public comment period has yielded an immense amount of feedback, including from various elements of the civil rights and criminal justice movement,” Xavier Becerra, the health and human services secretary, said in a statement.

“It’s clear that there are still more conversations to have, and that will take significantly more time.”

The delay runs counter to a major push by federal regulators, who saw a ban as a way to save lives and lower lung cancer deaths. The idea had united an array of public health groups, including leading lung, heart, cancer and pediatricians associations.

They cite years of data suggesting that menthol cigarettes, long marketed to African-American smokers, make it more palatable to start smoking and more difficult to stop.

“Two full years after releasing proposed rules backed by extensive scientific evidence — and more than a decade since the F.D.A. began examining menthol cigarettes — the administration has failed to take decisive action to remove these deadly, addictive products from the market,” Nancy Brown, chief executive of the American Heart Association, said in a statement.

“The administration’s inaction is enabling the tobacco industry to continue aggressively marketing these products and attracting and addicting new users.”

The F.D.A. formally proposed the ban in May 2022, saying there were 18.5 million smokers who preferred menthol brands in the United States. Researchers looking at similar moves in other nations estimated that a ban could result in nearly a quarter of smokers quitting, with the rest moving to non-menthol cigarettes or managing to keep smoking menthols.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the administration’s decision on Friday.

The proposal made its way to the White House in October. Soon official calendars were flooded with meeting requests from supporters of the ban and also from opponents, which included tobacco companies, convenience stores and gas station retailers that projected that the ban would cost them billions of dollars in sales.

Reynolds American, which makes Newport menthol cigarettes, gave millions of dollars in recent years to political action funds that benefit Republican lawmakers, as well as $1 million in February to a fund supporting former President Donald Trump.

Altria, which makes some menthol Marlboro cigarettes, donated less, but also contributed to funds supporting Republican lawmakers.

Republicans in Congress have denounced the proposed ban in letters to the Biden administration, warning that it would increase trafficking in counterfeit cigarettes. Republicans also mounted a failed effort last year to keep the government from funding any work on the ban.

Opponents of the ban have sponsored prime-time commercials, criticizing the ban and saying it would fuel illicit tobacco trafficking and enrich cartels. They have helped to promote some Black leaders’ concerns that a ban would encourage law enforcement to target Black smokers. (The F.D.A. has said such a ban would be enforced at the manufacturer level.)

Increased opposition presented a conundrum to Mr. Biden, who faces a tight re-election race and waning support among Black voters.

Reynolds has argued the ban will have “serious unintended consequences,” leading to more counterfeit cigarette use that will undermine public health. Altria has raised the same argument and has also said that historically low and declining youth smoking rates do not justify pursuing a ban.

The F.D.A. had previously said that it expected to see the menthol ban finalized by the end of 2023. As months passed, public health groups amped up pressure, staging a “menthol funeral” outside the White House in January to highlight the lost opportunity to extend lives and stem smoking-related disease.

In April, the advocacy group Action on Smoking & Health and the African American Tobacco Control Leadership Council sued the administration in a bid for action.

“The F.D.A.’s own research confirms that a menthol ban would save lives; there is no scientific reason to delay finalizing this rule,” Laurent Huber, executive director of Action on Smoking & Health, said in a statement when the lawsuit was filed.
 
I just want my clove cigarettes back. The cigarillos aren’t the same and they damn well know it.

If it helps any. Super easy to make your own. I tired it once, put a bit to much alcohol and soak time to extract the flavor from the cloves but over all it was a good experience.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Jason Wynn
This rule has garnered historic attention
aliens laugh.jpg
Trying to take menthol cigarettes from Blacks has garnered historic opposition. Black people, how can you ever recover from that?
 
Back