UK smoking ban for younger generations passes first parliamentary hurdle
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[April 17, 2024]
By Sarah Young and Alistair Smout
LONDON (Reuters) -British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's plan to ban
anyone aged 15 and under from ever buying cigarettes passed its first
parliamentary vote on Tuesday, although dozens of his own lawmakers
voted against it.
Sunak's plan to impose some of the world's strictest anti-smoking rules
has angered some members of his governing Conservative Party, including
former prime ministers Liz Truss and Boris Johnson, who say the state
should not interfere in how people live their lives.
The bill passed a vote in Britain's parliament with 383 in favor and 67
against, meaning it will progress to the next stage in parliament, where
it can be subject to amendment.
Lawmakers were given a so-called free vote on the bill, meaning they did
not have to vote along party lines. A similar law in New Zealand was
scrapped this year by the new coalition government before the
legislation went into force.
But 57 Conservatives, including Business and Trade Secretary Kemi
Badenoch, voted against the plan, and the scale of the rebellion was
another blow for Sunak, who has already faced criticism in his party
over issues ranging from climate change to defense policy.
The legislation is one of Sunak's flagship policies before an election
later this year which opinion polls suggest the opposition Labor Party
will win.
The Tobacco and Vapes Bill aims to prevent children born since 2009 from
ever being able to legally buy tobacco, rather than criminalizing the
habit.
Sunak has said it will tackle "the single biggest entirely preventable
cause of ill-health, disability and death".
PUBLIC SUPPORT
About 6.4 million people were smokers in the UK in 2022, the Office for
National Statistics has estimated, around 13% of the adult population.
That is much lower than other European countries such as Italy, Germany
and France, where between 18%-23% of adults smoke, according to OECD
figures.
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A man holds his cigarette as he smokes in London, Britain, April 11,
2024. REUTERS/Isabel Infantes/File Photo
There is strong support for the ban
from medical and healthcare experts and charities, who say smoking
causes 80,000 deaths every year plus many more smoking-related
illnesses.
Polling by YouGov also suggests a smoking ban is popular, with a
third of voters supporting the phased approach, 30% supporting a ban
for everyone at the same time and only a quarter saying there
shouldn't be any ban.
The plans have hit the share price of companies like L&B cigarette
maker Imperial Brands, which has highlighted the UK as one of its
key markets.
It and other tobacco companies like Dunhill maker British American
Tobacco have criticized the proposed ban, saying it could fuel black
market trade and will be difficult to enforce.
Business minister Badenoch said she was not a smoker and agreed with
Sunak's intentions, but said she opposed the bill as she was
concerned about its impact on people's rights and difficulty in
enforcing the policy.
"We should not treat legally competent adults differently in this
way, where people born a day apart will have permanently different
rights," she said on social media platform X.
(Reporting by Sarah Young; additional reporting by Emma Rumney, Paul
Sandle and Alistair Smout, Editing by Kate Holton, Timothy Heritage,
Gareth Jones and Jonathan Oatis)
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