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Opposition leader Tony Abbott dismissed the tax hike as a cash grab, and said he wanted evidence changing the packaging would reduce smoking. "I'm not in the business of defending smoking, I want to make that absolutely clear. But I also want to make absolutely clear that this is not a health policy
-- this is a tax grab," Abbott said. Australia has banned tobacco ads from print, television and radio for years. The new proposal would also restrict Internet advertising. Stripping packages of their logos will effectively stamp out tobacco companies' marketing campaigns, said Rob Moodie, chair of the government's National Preventative Health Taskforce, which recommended the legislation. "The thing that tobacco companies fear second after price increases is plain packaging because it takes away their last real avenue for branding their cigarettes," Moodie said. "It also takes away their in-store presence." The prevalence of Australian smokers has dropped from around 24 percent in 1998 to 16.6 percent today, said Moodie, who attributed the drop in part to advertising restrictions, social marketing campaigns highlighting the dangers of smoking and price hikes.
[Associated
Press;
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