Say No To Nanny

Smokefree Ideology


Nicotine Wars

 

40 Years of Hurt

Prejudice and Prohibition

Road To Ruin?

Search This Site
The Pleasure of Smoking

Forest Polling Report

Outdoor Smoking Bans

Share This Page
Powered by Squarespace
Thursday
Mar212024

Times Radio, a former Health Secretary, and me

I was a bit dismissive of Times Radio last week.

It was partly because they interviewed Hazel Cheeseman of ASH on No Smoking Day and it was such a soft and one-sided interview it was ridiculous.

Also, since the station was launched in 2020, Forest has very rarely been invited to appear and I put it down to the fact that The Times (newspaper) is firmly in the tobacco prohibition camp.

On one of the few occasions I have been invited on it was to take part in an item to mark the 50th anniversary of ASH.

Broadcast on December 2, 2021, the item lasted 25 minutes. The main guest, as you might expect, was Deborah Arnott, CEO of ASH.

The other guests were Patricia Hewitt, the former Labour MP who was Secretary of State for Health when the public smoking ban was introduced, anti-smoking campaigner Prof Robert West, and me.

I assumed that my role for the short time I was on air was to play devil’s advocate and cast a more sceptical eye on ASH’s place in history.

Instead I got the distinct impression that the presenter, Matt Chorley, was a bit miffed when I wasn’t as respectful as everyone else.

When Deborah and I began arguing and talking over one another (she started it!) I sensed that the carefully constructed segment had gone a bit Pete Tong and it was clear who Chorley blamed - me!

(See ASH at 50.)

Fast forward to yesterday and following a long absence from the station I was invited to take part in a ten-minute discussion about the Tobacco and Vapes Bill and the UCL study on e-cigarettes that featured as the lead story in The Times yesterday.

It was recorded via Zoom at 6.30pm and broadcast late last night, around 11.30. I was planning to stay up and listen but I fell asleep a few minutes before it was due to be broadcast.

What I can say is, it was one of the more agreeable discussions I’ve been involved in on radio or television.

The presenter was Carole Walker and my fellow guest was Stephen Dorrell, the former Conservative MP (1979-2015) who was Secretary of State for Health under John Major, and chairman of the Health Select Committee from 2010 to 2014.

Politically Dorrell is as wet as they come, although in person he was very friendly. (I think he was relieved that I wasn’t my namesake, the former Conservative Cabinet minister Simon Clarke.)

I had forgotten though that in the aftermath of Brexit he had left the Conservative Party, standing as a Change UK candidate in the 2019 European elections, before joining the Lib Dems and standing as one of their candidates in the 2019 general election.

I expected him to be in favour of the generational tobacco ban, and he was. To be fair, though, while we disagreed on some points, we agreed on others, and it was an amiable and, I think, informative discussion, very well moderated by Carole Walker who gave us plenty of time to speak.

We didn’t interrupt or speak over one another, and we were respectful (I think) of one another’s views.

It helped that although it was an audio only recording we could nevertheless see one another on the Zoom link, so it felt more like a normal conversation.

Either way, it was one of the more enjoyable interviews I’ve done, and I wish this was the norm rather than the more confrontational type of discussion we have come to expect.

You’ll have to take my word for it, though, because I can’t find a link to the programme. If I do I’ll post it here.

PS. I was interested to hear Dorrell suggest that society has moved on and people now expect government to make decisions on their behalf about potentially unhealthy habits and behaviours.

He may be right. Either way, I will return to this another time.

Update: Times Radio programmes appear to be available for a week on the Times Radio app. Downloading the app, and searching for programmes, is pretty straightforward, even for me.

Wednesday
Mar202024

You couldn't make it up!

The Government finally introduced the Tobacco and Vapes Bill in the Commons today.

After weeks of speculation, the Department of Health and Social Care announced it in a press release embargoed until midnight last night. (See – Smokefree generation one step closer as bill introduced.)

Forest’s response was quoted in full by inews:

“The government has no mandate to ban the sale of tobacco to adults.

“The policy has never featured in a single election manifesto, and less than a year ago the government dismissed the idea as 'too big a departure' and said it wasn't going to pursue it.

"What's changed, apart from Rishi Sunak's increasingly desperate attempts to leave a personal legacy?

“No-one wants children to smoke, but the idea that government should take away people's freedom to choose long after they have grown up is absurd.

“Instead of rushing this vanity project through parliament, the prime minister should include the policy in the Tories’ election manifesto and let the people decide.”

Via the Press Association, an edited version of that quote was reported by the Independent, Daily Express, Daily Mail, plus local and regional newspapers around the country.

We were also quoted on the BBC News website (UK smoking ban for those born after 2009 starts journey into law).

In general though I was surprised by how little coverage the first reading of the Bill received. This, after all, is one of Rishi Sunak’s flagship policies, without which he will leave office with almost nothing to show for his two years as PM.

Instead, reports of the Bill seems to have been marginalised by another story, the results of a new 'landmark' study by scientists at University College London that suggest that e-cigarettes "might not be as harmless as originally thought".

I won't go into the details here. All I'll say is, the headlines are way over the top and represent unnecessary scaremongering. For example:

  • Vaping ‘linked to cancer and damages body like smoking’ (The Times)
  • Vaping 'causes same DNA changes as smoking' and could lead to cancer (Daily Express)
  • Vapers suffer ‘similar’ DNA damage to smokers – and it’s linked to lung cancer (The Sun)
  • Vaping causes similar DNA damage to smoking - as study links e-cigarettes to cancer risk (Sky News)
  • Fears vaping could cause CANCER: Shock study reveals e-cigs damage DNA just like smoking (Daily Mail)

But wait. According to Dr Ian Walker, executive director of policy at Cancer Research UK, "This study contributes to our understanding of e-cigarettes, but it does not show that e-cigarettes cause cancer" [my emphasis].

Try telling the headline writers!

Thankfully, who better to bring a calm head to the situation than Maria Caulfield, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the DHSC. I didn't see it but according to The Times:

Asked to "look down the lens and tell him", she issued a direct appeal to her husband on Sky News to "stop vaping".

What?!

As a minister in a government that has put vaping at the forefront of its smoke free ambition, isn't she supposed to be persuading smokers to Swap to Stop (ie switch to vaping), not pleading with her nearest and dearest to quit the very thing that helped him stop smoking?

You couldn't make it up!

Full story: Health minister begs husband to stop vaping during live interview (Sky News)

Tuesday
Mar192024

Tobacco and vapes banned wagon starts to roll

According to the Guardian, the Tobacco and Vapes Bill will have its first reading in the House of Commons tomorrow.

It follows a similar report by the Express on Friday (which I was a little sceptical about) so it seems the legislation is finally edging forward, albeit a few weeks later than expected.

If you're not familiar with it, it's worth reading about the legislative process.

There is no debate at the first reading of a bill. That happens at the second reading which usually follows two weeks later, although in this instance that would be during the Easter recess, so if the first reading is tomorrow we must assume the second reading will be scheduled for mid April.

(Note to self: never assume anything!)

The second reading is followed by the committee stage and then the report stage (when amendments are discussed).

The third reading of a bill takes place in the Commons after the report stage in the House of Lords and that ought to be that, although some bills can move backwards and forwards between the two Houses before agreement is reached and the legislation moves on to Royal Assent.

Reports currently suggest that upwards of 70 Tory MPs may vote against the generational ban which would embarrass the prime minister without actually derailing a measure that has the support of the Labour Party.

One amendment I've heard suggested would replace the ban with a new age restriction – raising the age of sale from 18 to 21 – but whether Sunak would accept that change to his flagship policy remains to be seen.

I guess it comes down to numbers and the strength of feeling among Conservative backbenchers.

Another complication concerns the plan to ban disposable vapes because that too is controversial, but how many Conservative MPs are prepared to vote against their own government ahead of an election?

Then again, given the polls, what have they to lose? Ditto those who are standing down.

I’ll keep you posted. Either way it's going to be an interesting few weeks.

See: Sunak braces for backlash as smoking ban bill to be introduced in Commons (Guardian)

Sunday
Mar172024

Why Steve Harley was a Big Big Deal

Sorry to hear that Steve Harley has died, aged 73.

‘Big Big Deal’, a solo single released in 1974 after the original members of Cockney Rebel (bar the drummer) had left the band, is still one of my favourite singles from that period.

Even though it wasn’t a hit, and I didn’t have a record player, I bought the 7” vinyl after I heard it on the Radio 1 Breakfast Show.

(I can still remember turning up the volume in the kitchen before I left to catch the bus to school.)

Harley subsequently recruited new musicians to replace the departing band members, and Cockney Rebel became Steve Harley & Cockney Rebel.

He then enjoyed the biggest hit of his career, the million-selling ‘Make Me Smile (Come Up And See Me)’, which is rarely off the radio even today, and whose lyrics were allegedly a dig at his former colleagues.

As a regular reader of NME throughout the Seventies, I kept scrapbooks of cuttings that unfortunately ‘disappeared’ after my parents moved house.

Harley, a former journalist himself, featured prominently in the paper for several years until his star began to wane, so I remember how articulate (and occasionally big-headed) he was.

As it happens, the two Cockney Rebel albums I bought were not the early, critically acclaimed records featuring the original band, but the final two albums that were less well received and failed to produce a top 30 single - Timeless Flight and Love’s A Prima Donna, both released in 1976.

Funnily enough, the latter was responsible for one of the lowest moments of my life when I played it during a social evening at an outdoor activity centre on the west coast of Scotland and after several tracks one of my school ‘friends’ not only demanded to know “What is this shit?” but refused to let me play side two.

In hindsight it’s fair to say the album is an acquired taste but at the time it wasn’t very nice to have it critiqued so publicly and so brutally!

Nevertheless, if I was compiling a Steve Harley playlist today I’d still include the title track plus the cover version of ‘Here Comes The Sun’, a top ten hit in the ‘sizzling’ summer of ‘76.

I’d also include ‘White White Dove’ and ‘Black Or White’ from Timeless Flight. And to that I would add some early album tracks, ‘Make Me Smile’ (obviously), and ‘Big Big Deal’.

RIP.

See also: Steve Harley: 1970s Cockney Rebel who took risks and wrote hits (Guardian)
Farewell to Steve Harley, the impossibly glamorous Cockney Rebel frontman who made us all smile (Telegraph)

Sunday
Mar172024

Was that it?

How was it for you? No Smoking Day, I mean.

On Wednesday Hazel Cheeseman, deputy CEO of ASH, tweeted that her first interview of the day was on Times Radio, but when I searched for it I found that it was broadcast between 5.00 and 6.00am.

To put this in perspective, as of December 2023 Times Radio had a weekly listening figure of 492,000, which suggests fewer than 100,000 a day. Goodness knows how many are listening before 6.00am.

Thereafter, going by tweets alone, I didn’t see much evidence of any more interviews, although local councils and the public health industry did their best to promote No Smoking Day on social media.

As far as I could tell, public engagement was minimal. Instead, the main event was a reception in Parliament hosted by the All Party Parliamentary Group on Smoking and Health that, coincidentally, is run by ASH.

From the photos I’ve seen it took place in the Thames Pavilion (capacity 60), which is the smaller of the two pavilions on the terrace of the House of Commons. (The larger of the two, the Terrace Pavilion, holds 200.)

Those that did attend were there to support demands for a ‘smoke-free generation’ and badger the Government to publish the Tobacco and Vapes Bill without delay.

The principal speaker appeared to be junior health minister Andrea Leadsom who has become something of a cheerleader for the generational tobacco ban, and her comments were obviously designed to allay fears that the Bill might be significantly delayed, or abandoned.

Lord Bethell, for example, tweeted:

Strong from @andrealeadsom on the government’s determination to see through the Tobacco and Vapes Bill on National No Smoking Day. Really encouraging.

The bad news for Bethell is that, whoever makes the final decision on the timetable for the generational ban, it won’t be Leadsom who, despite running against Theresa May for the Tory leadership in 2016, is a fairly insignificant cog in the engine of government.

In fact, I was slightly surprised the Government didn’t take the opportunity to publish the Bill on No Smoking Day. After all, if the generational ban is as popular as they say it is, it would have been a useful distraction from everything else that happened last week.

Nevertheless, I’m glad ASH and co had their day in parliament. I’m just sorry that, outside the anti-smoking bubble, so few people noticed, or cared.

PS. On Friday afternoon the Express reported that the Bill may be published this week. To the best of my knowledge no-one else has been able to confirm this ‘exclusive’ so we’ll just have to wait and see.

The paper also suggested that upwards of 70 Conservative MPs are prepared to vote against it which may not be enough to stop the legislation, but is Downing Street really prepared to risk such a significant rebellion on what is essentially a vanity project?

See: Rishi Sunak braced for major rebellion over smoking ban in just days with 70 MPs to revolt (Express)

For the record, I’m not sure the Express is the most reliable source of news, but time will tell.

Wednesday
Mar132024

Forest in Paris

It’s the 40th anniversary of No Smoking Day today.

Twenty-five years ago, shortly after I joined Forest, we marked the event by sending a crack team of supporters to Paris.

The aim was to escape the annual nagathon by spending the day in what was then considered the European capital of smoking.

No Smoking Day was still a major event in 1999 and our trip attracted quite a lot of interest.

I stayed in London to manage media calls while my colleague Juliette Torres (above) did a series of interviews from the smoking coach on board the Eurostar train, and again when the group arrived in Paris.

On arrival at Gard du Nord they were met by a delegation from Le Calumet de la Paix (the French equivalent of Forest) who had arranged to host a lunch in our honour at a restaurant used by the Resistance during the war.

Other members of the party included Forest chairman, Lord Harris of High Cross, and our office manager Jenny Sharkey.

We were also joined by Bob Shields, chief feature writer for the Daily Record, and the result was a very funny double page spread in Scotland’s biggest selling national newspaper.

I think Bob enjoyed himself because a few months later he joined us again to receive our Smoker-Friendly Journalist of the Year award at a party at Little Havana, a Cuban-style cigar bar off Leicester Square in London.

His prize was a novelty lighter in the form of a replica hand grenade. It was made of metal and was the size of a real hand grenade. Bob was delighted. Unfortunately it was confiscated by security staff at Gatwick shortly before he boarded his flight home to Glasgow!

But Bob’s story doesn’t end there. Since retiring from the Daily Record in 2008, he’s written a weekly column for the Ayrshire Post, where his career began.

He also bought the Twa Dugs, a bar in Ayr, and two years ago, aged 66, he stood as an independent candidate and was elected on to South Ayrshire Council.

As he told Dram (Councillor Bob Shields):

I have been listening to my regulars complaining about the town for years and I knew what mattered to them. I also knew what the local council kept getting wrong. I used to put suggestions in my regular column in the Ayrshire Post but no one bothered, but many readers would tell me that they agreed with me. They used to say, “What can we do, how can we get things right?” I would suggest they tried changing things with their vote or stand to be an independent, then I thought I was being a bit hypocritical by asking other people to do it and not putting myself forward. That is how it all started. To change the council we had to change the councillors.

See also: Legendary columnist Bob Shields says farewell to Daily Record (October 21, 2008)

Below: Bob Shields before boarding the train at the original Eurostar terminal at Waterloo Station on Wednesday March 10, 1999

Tuesday
Mar122024

Vape tax and a ban on disposable vapes - will vapers really go back to smoking?

Some thoughts prompted by last week’s Budget.

Yes, the vape tax is stupid and sends the wrong message about the risk of vaping, but will former smokers who now vape really go back to smoking tobacco, as vaping advocates claim?

The answer, quite simply, is no.

After all, how weak-willed do you have to be that, having stopped smoking by switching to vapes, you then revert to what is still a substantially more expensive and riskier product when the price of vaping goes up?

You may conceivably quit vaping, but why would you go back to a much more expensive habit? Unfortunately this is the type of non sequitur vaping advocates love to advance.

Exactly the same argument is used in relation to a ban on disposable vapes. Prohibit them, we are told, and vapers will go back to smoking and more lives will be lost. Allegedly.

Look, I'm strongly opposed to a ban on single use vapes, but not for that reason because I simply don’t accept it.

Prohibition of disposable vapes might discourage existing smokers from switching because they are convenient and easy to use (much like cigarettes, in fact), but why would anyone revert to a product that, as I say, is vastly more expensive and far more harmful, potentially, when other options, including rechargeable vapes, are still widely available on the high street?

It doesn't make sense but it's typical of the 'vapers as victims' narrative that vaping advocates often promote.

One of the worst is that vapers cannot be expected to share an outdoor smoking area with, heaven forbid, smokers because the smell of tobacco smoke, and the sight of people smoking, might send them back into the arms of their former love.

Oh, please!!!

A similar argument was made by some ex-smokers ahead of the public smoking ban.

It was said that smoking should be banned in every pub in the country because it wasn’t fair to expose ex-smokers to other people smoking because the temptation to smoke might be too much for them.

I remember being interviewed alongside former smokers who made exactly that point, but it’s a bit like banning alcohol in pubs because the urge to drink might be too much for a recovering alcoholic.

The temptation argument may have some validity for the very weak-willed, but it’s not sufficient reason to ban the public consumption of alcohol, or tobacco.

If you’re an alcoholic or a former smoker it’s up to you, not the rest of society, to avoid situations where you might be encouraged to drink or smoke. Own your addiction, don’t expect others to change their lifestyle too.

But back to vaping.

I’m opposed to most public vaping bans, which seem unnecessary to me, but if you’re against excessive restrictions on vaping I would suggest that it’s in your interest to oppose excessive restrictions on smoking too because one will inevitably lead to the other.

Every time I write about this I seem to annoy a handful of vapers who insist they support smokers’ rights too. Unfortunately there’s not a lot of evidence to support this.

Many people who used to be outspoken opponents of anti-smoking legislation are now virtually mute on the subject, but woe betide anything that threatens their new love, vaping.

Moreover, while there are some vapers who are opposed to excessive regulations on tobacco and smoking, I challenge anyone to name any pro-vaping organisation that has EVER publicly opposed any anti-smoking measure, whether it be smoking bans, plain packaging, the ban on menthol cigarettes, or the generational tobacco ban.

I’m sorry, but I can’t think of a single one.

They may think they’re being clever or politically prudent, but I am convinced that, long-term, it’s self-defeating, and the moral cowardice of not standing up for adults who prefer to smoke is one of the reasons I find some members of the vaping lobby more than a bit pathetic.

The truth is, the pro-vaping argument will never be won on health grounds alone. Even though there is currently little evidence to suggest that vaping is a serious threat to health, history tells us that it’s irrelevant.

I guarantee that sufficient 'evidence' will be found, sooner or later, that will make redundant all the arguments about vaping being 95 per cent less harmful than smoking tobacco.

At that point, vaping advocates who have focussed exclusively on the health benefits of vaping (compared to smoking) will have nowhere to turn. They will be up a cul-de-sac of their own making.

If, on the other hand, they also promoted the freedom of choice argument (the same argument Forest has used for 45 years to defend an adult’s right to smoke and, more recently, vape), they would at least have a consistent and coherent position to fall back on.

That position, to be clear, is this: whatever the health risks of smoking or vaping, as long as consumers are informed about the potential and relative risks of either habit, adults must be free to practise either habit without punitive restrictions and taxation, or, worse, prohibition.

The same argument applies to drinking alcohol, consuming sugar, or eating meat, fatty foods and dairy products – and anything else that might conceivably be 'bad' for us over a long period.

Instead, vaping advocates have put their entire case in one basket - the one that says vaping is significantly ‘safer’ than smoking.

I don’t dispute that argument, by the way, but remember the 'debate' about passive smoking?

To this day I would contend that, based on the evidence, the risk of harm from environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) has been greatly exaggerated and still doesn’t justify the comprehensive public smoking bans that have swept the world.

Despite that we lost the public and political battle because we faced a tsunami of 'evidence', much of it unsubstantiated or anecdotal, and most of it statistically insignificant in terms of risk, but none of that mattered. It was the perception of harm that counted, not the scientific reality.

Meanwhile organisations like the World Vapers Alliance continue to talk openly of ‘beating’ smoking, as if smoking is the enemy, ignoring the inconvenient truth that millions of adults enjoy the habit and don’t want to quit or switch to an alternative nicotine product.

(This US-based organisation was at it again only last week, with a press release commenting on the UK Government’s proposed vape tax headlined, 'The UK’s announced increased vaping tax jeopardises the country’s success in beating smoking'.)

Sadly we’re living in an age where governments – aided and abetted by a ravenous public health industry that sees excise duty on vaping products as a future source of income for its work – want to create the impossible, a risk free society in which everyday decisions about our private health and welfare are taken not by individual citizens but by politicians and faceless bureaucrats.

To justify government intervention, the anti-smoking lobby argues that ‘helping’ smokers quit will save the taxpayer money, but will it?

Not for one second do I believe the claims that smoking costs society in Britain 15, 50 or, even more absurdly, 150 billion pounds a year.

The only figures that matter are the estimated cost of treating smoking-related illnesses on the NHS (said to be £2.5b annually but almost certainly exaggerated, like everything else), and the recorded annual income from tobacco duty and VAT - around £9-11 billion a year.

Viewed dispassionately, smokers are therefore a net benefit to the taxpayer, a fact that should never be forgotten by government, anti-smoking campaigners, and vapers who will one day have to pick up the tab as revenue from tobacco declines thanks to a thriving generational ban black market allied to Britain's self-imposed, and self-defeating, 'smoke-free' status.

In fact, to those complaining about the Chancellor's vape tax, all I can say is ... you ain't seen nothing yet.

This is just the start of a cash grab on your habit and the closer government gets to its smoke-free ambition the more vapers will be forced to pay.

Tuesday
Mar122024

From Overnight Sensation to hit record

Eric Carmen, the American singer-songwriter who has died, aged 74, is best known in Britain for the 1975 hit single ‘All By Myself’.

Personally, I always considered it a bit of a dirge and never liked it.

Far better, in my view, is the lost classic he wrote and recorded with the Raspberries, the band he was in before he went solo.

Released in September 1974, ‘Overnight Sensation (Hit Record)’ is one of my all-time favourite pop songs.

Described by one critic as an ‘epic-scale production number about the thrill of hearing your song on the radio’, it was a minor hit in America and Canada but not the UK, although I remember it getting some air play.

Another critic called it a “mini-symphony packed into a five minute song" that is "overflowing with vocals, percussion, guitars, drums, saxophones, pianos, you name it”.

It’s definitely one of those tracks where they threw the kitchen sink at the production.

At one point there’s even a few bars where it sounds like the song is being played on a tinny transistor radio.

Towards the end the song appears to be fading to a gentle, piano-led conclusion before the drums come crashing back in and the rousing chorus is resumed.

Some years ago I bought Greatest, a 2005 compilation album by the Raspberries, who recorded four albums between 1971 and 1974.

Nothing on it comes close to ‘Overnight Sensation’ which captures perfectly the yearning for a chart-topping record and it’s one of the few pop songs I have never grown tired of hearing.

According to Carmen, speaking on stage during a reunion tour in 2004, the record company refused to release the song under the title ‘Hit Record’ because they felt it was “way too presumptuous” so they changed it to the “much less presumptuous” ‘Overnight Sensation’.

Ironically he did have a genuine, incontestable, hit record the following year with the maudlin ‘All By Myself’, but this is the song I’ll remember him for.

Play it LOUD!