Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Pubdate: Fri, 19 Jun 1998 SMOKE GETS IN THEIR AYES THE Senate just couldn't handle the tobacco issue. If senators just could have focused on the original goals of Sen. John McCain's tobacco bill -- curbing teen smoking, regulating nicotine as a drug, ending the flood of costly lawsuits and penalizing the tobacco industry for years of deadly lies -- they might have been able to pass it. Instead, they focused on the money, the $516 billion the bill was expected to cost the tobacco industry over 25 years. The Democrats, following President Clinton's lead, couldn't resist the urge to start spending that money on social programs. The Republicans couldn't resist the urge to give it away as a tax cut. The bickering over money played right into the hands of the tobacco companies, which spent $40 million on ads to convince the American people that the Senate had abandoned the original debate on smoking and health, which it had. After the death of the bill due to procedural causes, Republicans and Democrats in the House and the Senate were vowing on Thursday to resurrect the bill in some form. But it is unlikely that any substantive tobacco legislation will come out of Congress this year. And while that is disappointing, it is not the worst that could have happened. We have said from the beginning that a bad tobacco bill would be worse than no tobacco bill at all, and this one, in its final form, was bad indeed. It would have penalized tobacco companies billions of dollars a year and forced on them potentially unconstitutional restrictions on advertising without offering them in return any protection from future liability suits. While we don't object to making the industry pay for its sins, we believe that some limit on liability for past acts is justified. The bill also threw in some extraneous provisions we didn't like, such as a ban on the use of federal money for needle exchanges. Fortunately, the defeat of the McCain bill does not mean the tobacco companies are off the hook. The battle simply moves back to the courts and to state and local governments, where the anti-tobacco forces have been making steady progress. A year ago, the tobacco companies agreed to a $368 billion settlement with state attorneys general over the cost of treating sick smokers. The McCain bill was supposed to ratify that agreement. But without congressional approval, the industry is forced to settle with each state, and the climate in the courts grows less hospitable to tobacco all the time. Where once the industry was able to rebuff every claim against it, in the past year it has agreed to pay out billions. Already the companies have agreed to pay $36 billion to settle four state lawsuits. Several others, including California's, are scheduled to go to trial in the next few months. In addition, thanks to the disclosure of secret industry documents, juries are now awarding damages to smokers who claim they were addicted to tobacco by unscrupulous industry practices. There are nearly 1,000 individual and class-action suits pending, including a major suit brought by Blue Cross and Blue Shield. As for government regulation of nicotine, that, too, will be decided by the courts. The federal 4th Circuit Court of Appeals is considering whether the Food and Drug Administration has the power to regulate the nicotine in tobacco or even ban it. Meanwhile, the court of public opinion continues to chip away at the privileges of smokers. City councils and state legislatures across the country are passing ever tougher restrictions on public smoking and on the sale of tobacco products to minors. This week, the cigarette companies are celebrating the defeat of the McCain bill. Let them savor their victory, because there are major defeats ahead. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)