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Tobacco
Background
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Go
directly to the 1994 Tobacco CEO Hearings
Background
Rep. Waxman's
battles on tobacco have been the cornerstone of his commitment to
improving public health. Tobacco use is the most serious health
problem facing America, and Rep. Waxman believes that the single
most important step we can take to improve public health is to reduce
tobacco use.
From 1979 through
1994, Rep. Waxman served as Chairman of the Subcommittee on Health
and the Environment of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce
(now the House Commerce Committee). During those years, the Subcommittee
had legislative and oversight jurisdiction over a wide range of
health issues. Rep. Waxman used that opportunity to conduct scores
of hearings on tobacco and to investigate the tobacco industry.
The House of
Representatives passed to Republican control in November 1994. Today
Rep. Waxman continues the battle against tobacco in his post as
the Ranking Minority Member of the House Government Reform Committee.
Tobacco
Warning Labels
In the early
1980s, Rep. Waxman chaired a series of hearings that led to the
first reform of tobacco warning labels. With his trademark tenacity,
Rep. Waxman pushed to update the vague and timeworn warning label
on cigarette packs. For nearly twenty years, the label had remained
virtually unchanged, cautioning only that smoking was "dangerous"
to one's health. Rep. Waxman's legislation mandated sharp new warning
labels linking cigarette smoking to lung cancer, heart disease,
and emphysema. His bill created several new, larger warning labels
and required tobacco companies to switch the labels regularly so
they could attract more attention. The legislation extended the
new warning label requirements to billboards, newspapers, and other
advertisements. It also required tobacco companies to disclose their
secret lists of ingredients to the federal government.
Rep. Waxman
extended warning labels to smokeless tobacco products as well. While
warning labels had been required for cigarettes since 1966 and cigarette
advertising had been banned from broadcast since 1970, smokeless
tobacco had been exempt. Rep. Waxman held hearings which disclosed
that teenagers were turning to snuff and chewing tobacco in the
mistaken belief that the lack of advertising restrictions and warning
labels meant such products were safe. He authored legislation requiring
health warning labels to appear on smokeless tobacco products and
in advertisements, and he banned advertisements of smokeless tobacco
products from radio and television.
Advertising
and Marketing Restrictions
Throughout the
1980s and 1990s, Rep. Waxman introduced legislation that would impose
stricter controls over the marketing and selling of tobacco to children.
He sponsored legislation to limit tobacco advertisements to the
"tombstone" format -- written text in black and white
with no human figures or imagery allowed other than a picture of
the cigarette brand. His legislation would have prohibited cigarette
sponsorship of sporting events and public entertainment, banned
most cigarette sales by vending machines, and ended public distribution
of free tobacco product samples. Although this legislation was not
enacted into law, many of its provisions were incorporated into
the FDA's landmark 1996 tobacco regulation.
Over the years
Rep. Waxman used his influential post as Chairman of the House Health
and Environment Subcommittee to conduct dozens of well-publicized
hearings on the hazards of smoking and tobacco advertising. This
happened at a time when no other committee in the House or Senate
was holding hearings on these issues. In one of these hearings Surgeon
General C. Everett Koop first released his report that unequivocally
branded nicotine an addictive substance, putting to rest any claims
that smoking was simply a habit. Rep. Waxman formed a close alliance
with Dr. Koop and worked to give him a national platform from which
to speak out on the dangers of tobacco. In 1986, Rep. Waxman held
the first congressional hearing on the hazards of environmental
tobacco smoke, with Surgeon General Koop testifying, eight years
before the EPA released its comprehensive report on environmental
tobacco smoke.
To help focus
public attention on the dangers of tobacco, Rep. Waxman had movie
stars and celebrities appear before his committee. These hearings
contributed to the vast change in public opinion about smoking.
The
Synar Amendment
Rep. Waxman
worked closely with Rep. Mike Synar, a member of his Subcommittee,
to assure passage of legislation that would prohibit the sale of
tobacco to minors. The legislation first required that every state
ban the sale of tobacco to minors. If states failed to adopt such
laws or failed to enforce the law, they would lose up to 40% of
their federal substance abuse funds. This legislation was an important
step towards the establishment of higher minimum ages nationwide
and in encouraging states to enforce the law more rigorously.
Environmental
Tobacco Smoke
Rep. Waxman
also authored legislation to require smoke-free public areas and
workplaces. His legislation would have restricted smoking to separately
ventilated rooms in virtually all non-residential buildings in the
nation. The legislation passed out of the Health and Environment
Subcommittee, but never moved further. Given the political strength
of the tobacco industry, it was a tribute to Rep. Waxman's legislative
skill that the bill moved at all.
Tobacco
Executives Testimony
In 1994, Rep.
Waxman chaired a critical series of hearings on tobacco. Most significant
was the one at which Chief Executive Officers of the nation's tobacco
companies testified. This hearing put a human face on the tobacco
industry for the first time. When the CEOs swore under oath that
smoking was not addictive and did not cause any disease, it became
clear to the American people that they were lying. This was the
turning point in the battle against the tobacco industry. Please
review excerpts of testimony at Rep. Waxman's hearings.
Hearings
on Internal Industry Documents
Other hearings
by the Waxman subcommittee exposed the secret activities of the
tobacco industry, both through the testimony of industry insiders
and internal tobacco company documents. Victor DeNoble, a former
scientist with Philip Morris, testified that the company had quashed
internal research in the 1980s that proved that nicotine was addictive.
Internal documents of the Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation
revealed they had manipulated nicotine levels and suppressed scientific
evidence that cigarettes were intended to affect the structure of
function of the body. The evidence uncovered through the Waxman
hearings contributed significantly to the landmark 1996
FDA tobacco regulations.
Rep.
Waxman's Work on Tobacco Through 1998
104th Congress
(1995-1996)
The House of
Representatives passed to Republican control in November 1994 and
Rep. Waxman became the Ranking Minority Member rather than Chairman
of the Subcommittee on Health and the Environment. In spite of this
change, Rep. Waxman continued his battle against tobacco. In July
and August 1995, Rep. Waxman took to the House floor to read from
secret tobacco company documents. These documents revealed that
Philip Morris had conducted an extensive research program into nicotine
manipulation and pharmacology -- and had even studied third graders
to determine if hyperactive children were a potential market for
cigarettes.
105th Congress
(1997-1998)
Rep. Waxman
continued to play a critical role in shaping tobacco policy. When
the Attorneys General and the tobacco industry set out their original
June 20, 1997 proposal, Rep. Waxman created an independent public
health committee -- the Koop-Kessler Committee on Tobacco Policy
and Public Health -- to lay out what good tobacco control policy
should include. This advisory committee played a critical role in
convincing the American public and the Clinton Administration that
the proposed tobacco settlement was fundamentally flawed and had
to be strengthened in order to protect public health.
Along with Rep.
Jim Hansen (R-UT) and Rep. Marty Meehan (D-MA), Rep. Waxman asked
the FTC to prepare a comprehensive economic analysis of the June
20 tobacco settlement. This analysis showed that the settlement
was even a better deal for the tobacco industry than anyone had
imagined. It not only immunized the tobacco industry from liability,
but provided them with a $123 billion exemption from antitrust laws.
Rep. Waxman
also continued to expose tobacco companies' efforts to market
to children. With the cooperation of the plaintiffs and their attorneys
in the Mangini litigation in California, Rep. Waxman released over
a thousand pages of previously secret documents from R.J. Reynolds.
These documents provided the first detailed window into RJR and
first detailed revelations of a tobacco company's efforts to exploit
children. Because information in these documents contradicted some
statements that RJR executives had made before Congress, Rep. Waxman
forwarded the documents to the Department of Justice for possible
prosecution. Rep. Waxman also obtained and released documents from
Philip Morris showing that they also targeted children.
To pass bipartisan
tobacco legislation, Rep. Waxman continued his collaboration with
Reps. Hansen and Meehan. They introduced comprehensive tobacco legislation
designed to reduce youth smoking by 80% within ten years. The legislation
raised cigarette prices to discourage youth smoking. It gave FDA
full regulatory authority over tobacco products. It provided comprehensive
protection from involuntary exposure to environmental tobacco smoke.
It funded essential tobacco control initiatives including a nationwide
public education campaign. And it did not give any immunity or special
legal privileges to the industry.
Concerned that
the tobacco industry might wield undue influence over Congress,
Rep. Waxman commissioned a study on the tobacco industry's
practice of providing corporate aircraft to congressional leaders
for campaign activities. The Democratic staff of the House Committee
on Government Reform handled the investigation. Titled Air Tobacco,
their report found that the tobacco industry provided more subsidized
campaign travel to congressional leaders and political parties than
any other corporate special interest, and the beneficiary of subsidized
campaign travel from the tobacco industry was the Republican congressional
leadership and Republican party organizations.
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