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Sunday
Oct082023

Fine words and podcasts butter no parsnips

I am grateful to every journalist, writer, and podcaster who has criticised and even poured scorn on Rishi Sunak's plan to ban the sale of cigarettes to future generations.

From The Spectator to the Telegraph via CapX and Spiked, the more liberal political commentariat has been in fine voice.

The best article, in my opinion, was Melanie McDonagh's brutal evisceration of Sunak in The Spectator (There’s nothing conservative about Sunak’s smoking ban) in which she described the PM as a 'Californian banker ... with no obvious tastes or habits that mark him out as a Tory'.

I suspect though that most commentators will quickly move on and their well-honed articles will, in the words of Bob Mortimer, soon be distant memories, like "fingerprints on an abandoned handrail".

As for podcasts, where do I start? The overwhelming majority are even more ephemeral, leaving almost no trace of their existence.

Last Orders, a Spiked podcast, is better than most but the choice of guests invited to discuss the nanny state has often left me perplexed and even a little miffed because after 70+ episodes, many of which have featured discussions about smoking, I have not once been asked to take part.

(I'm not sure why. No-one will give me an answer.)

Anyway, following Forest's hugely topical event at the Conservative conference in Manchester on Monday, I was momentarily led to believe that might be about to change.

But no. This week's guest to discuss smoking was journalist and former MEP Patrick O'Flynn who, to the best of my knowledge, has rarely if ever written or talked about the subject.

So what did he have to say?

Recorded on Tuesday, the day before Sunak's speech when it was already clear to everyone at conference that the PM was about to announce an incremental ban on the sale of cigarettes to future generations, Patrick declared:

"I would be surprised if Sunak goes ahead with this sort of ratchet mechanism because … the war on cigarettes has kind of been won.”

He later doubled down:

“I would be very surprised if this ultra hardline ratchet cigarette ban comes in because it does seem to me full of ludicrous problems.”

Admitting he had never smoked or vaped, he also confessed, "I can't say I have massively strong skin in the game".

Full marks for honesty but it begs the question: why was Patrick invited – in this of all weeks – to share his thoughts on a subject he clearly doesn't feel strongly about?

In my view, speaking as a campaigner rather than a commentator, this is no time for cosy, fireside chats.

Nor is it time to throw in the towel, as Last Orders presenter (and Spiked editor) Tom Slater effectively did here:

Rishi Sunak’s cigarette ban marks the final, depressing triumph of the nags and the killjoys ... England will never be the same.

Yes, the situation is grim and will almost certainly get worse as alcohol and 'unhealthy' food are targeted like tobacco, but dreary defeatism won't help and some of us have no intention of giving up without a fight.

Our ability to mount a counter-offensive will ultimately depend on the resources available to us but, whatever they are, this is a time for action, not light-hearted conversations about serious issues that are forgotten within minutes.

Put simply, fine words and podcasts butter no parsnips. Are you with me?

Update: Another great piece by Melanie McDonagh, in the Telegraph this time - Smoking David Hockney is a truer conservative than killjoy Rishi Sunak.

Saturday
Oct072023

Smoke alarm

Busy week. I have a lot more to say but a quick update.

Following Forest’s very topical fringe meeting (Smoking Gun: The infantilisation of Britain) at the Conservative conference in Manchester, the prime minister announced that the Government is to introduce an incremental rise in the age of sale of tobacco to stop future generations of adults buying cigarettes legally.

Amusingly (or not) I had barely returned home - having left conference before Sunak’s speech - when I got a call asking me to return to Manchester/Salford to do the BBC1 Breakfast programme on Thursday morning. (I arrived at 2.00am and was on air at 7.10 after a short night’s sleep in a nearby hotel.)

The other amusing thing was my interview with Jeremy Kyle on TalkTV. I was doing it from my Media City hotel room when the smoke alarm went off, live on air!

Anyway, here’s a list of interviews I did and a (non-comprehensive) list of online reports that included Forest’s response. I had to turn down several other interviews (including GB News) because timings clashed:

BBC Breakfast (BBC1)
BBC Radio Five Live phone-in with Nicky Campbell
BBC Radio Kent
BBC Radio Manchester
BBC Radio London
BBC Radio Ulster
BBC Radio Scotland
Channel 5 News
TalkTV with Jeremy Kyle
TalkTV with Vanessa Feltz
Times Radio
Sky News Radio

Online reports that featured a comment from Forest included:

BBC News, ITV News, Sky News, MailOnline, Daily Express, Financial Times, Daily Telegraph, Independent, The Sun, Daily Record, Press Association , Wales Online, Perspective Magazine, Reason Magazine, Washington Examiner and many more.

The pushback from multiple groups and commentators has been encouraging (we’re not alone!) but I must mention ‘There’s nothing conservative about Sunak’s smoking ban’ by Melanie McDonagh in The Spectator. McDonagh absolutely nails Rishi Sunak as an archetypal ‘Californian banker’ and the ‘most two-dimensional PM ever, with no obvious tastes or habits that mark him out as a Tory’.

I’m not saying we will stop this absurd, illiberal policy - although it ought to concern anyone who believes in freedom of choice and personal responsibility - but with proper (and I mean proper) resources we’ll at least go down fighting. I love a challenge and this ain’t over.

More to follow …

Tuesday
Oct032023

‘Conservative’ government in name only? Watch this space

To watch our fringe meeting at the Tory conference in Manchester click here or on the image above.

Panellists were me, the IEA’s Chris Snowdon and Reem Ibrahim, and Mark Oates, director of We Vape.

Rumours persist that Rishi Sunak will announce further anti-smoking measures during his conference speech tomorrow.

Whether this will include a New Zealand style generational ban on buying cigarettes, or extending the smoking ban to outdoor areas such as beer gardens, we’ll have to wait and see.

Either way, as I said yesterday, “If it’s true that the prime minister wants to introduce some of the world’s toughest anti-smoking measure, it will be a ‘Conservative’ government in name only.”

Saturday
Sep302023

Unsmoked out

Fair play to Philip Morris International.

Despite lamentable viewing figures, they're still churning out videos for their Unsmoke Your World YouTube channel.

This morning, for example, the @InsidePMI Twitter (or X) account proudly informed followers of a video posted on September 21:

When Angelika's friends didn't believe she would leave cigarettes behind, she took action. Discover the story here.

Total number of views in nine days? As I write, 19.

When the channel was launched on January 12 I wrote:

The global tobacco company that funds the Foundation for a Smokefree World and wants the UK government to ban the sale of cigarettes in England by 2030 has launched a new YouTube channel called Unsmoke Your World.

It will feature the ‘real experiences and stories of people around the world that decided to #Unsmoke’.

Although the channel was only launched officially today 18 videos have been uploaded already, some of them up to two months ago.

They come with titles like ‘Bob unsmoked to improve his music’, ‘Nelleke unsmoked for her family’, and ‘Astrid unsmoked her fiancé’.

At the time of writing they have been viewed 16, 13, and 19 times respectively.

So, nine-and-a-half months later, how's it going? The following videos have all been uploaded in the past month:

  • Marinko unsmoked for his best friend (56 views)
  • Jaime unsmoked for a happier life (151)
  • Eleni unsmoked for music (16)

Videos that were posted two months ago haven't done much better, and sometimes worse:

  • Panos unsmoked for his creations (18 views)
  • Fotis unsmoked for a new life (56)

Even if you go back nine months (videos were being posted even before the launch of the Unsmoke Your World channel) the results are equally underwhelming. For example:

  • Aphrodite unsmoked for herself (41 views)
  • Annebel unsmoked to stop a habit (33)
  • Haizel unsmoked for wellbeing (39)

And so on.

Meanwhile, what of the videos I highlighted in January. How are they doing?

Well, when I wrote that post 'Bob unsmoked to improve his music', 'Nelleke unsmoked for her family', and 'Astrid unsmoked her fiancé’ had been viewed 16, 13, and 19 times respectively.

Today those figures have leapt to 52, 48, and 44.

The video with the most views in January was ‘Eva unsmoked for art’ (95). Today poor old Eva still can't break three figures – as I write she's stranded on 97 views.

There's not much to add really, so I'll repeat what I wrote in January:

As you might expect, all these videos are well produced with impressive branding, but they haven’t exactly gone viral.

Full marks though for persistence.

Final thought: how much is this campaign costing PMI? If only they were a public body and we could submit a Freedom of Information request!

Failing that, perhaps they'd like to tell us.

See also: No nicotine - is that PMI’s long-term strategic aim?

Saturday
Sep302023

The GB News backlash - an unedifying spectacle 

I’m hesitant to comment on the GB News controversy.

However, as an occasional (non-paid!) guest who recently praised the fledgling station, it’s impossible to ignore completely.

To be clear, I can’t defend Laurence Fox’s comments, but whatever fate ultimately befalls GB News - and I hope it survives with some tweaks here and there - I’ve found much of the reaction pretty unedifying.

The worst was the Newsnight interview in which two of the three guests - one of them a ‘Conservative’ MP - called for GB News to be taken off air, without a single voice defending the station.

(According to GB News, Newsnight editor Stewart Maclean has since admitted the programme “could have done better”, which is putting it mildly.)

Also disappointing, but not surprising, was the reaction of TalkTV. Like GB News, TalkTV is another station that broadcasts programmes featuring some highly polarising presenters and guests.

Despite this TalkTV ran an on-screen banner describing GB News as a ‘HATE CHANNEL’, which I thought was pretty despicable.

It was obvious why they were doing it because GB News is TalkTV’s direct rival and, ratings wise, the former is currently doing way better. Nevertheless it didn’t sit well with me, and I can’t imagine it sat well with some of TalkTV’s presenters.

Fair play then to presenter Julia Hartley-Brewer, in her last week on the breakfast programme before she switches to the early afternoon slot, for tweeting:

I'm surprised that so many people - including MPs and journalists - have so much time to spend demanding that @Ofcom close down a TV station they don't watch because someone said something they don't agree with.

In response to someone who then commented on her tweet, she added:

1. The BBC, Sky and ITV routinely break Ofcom rules with biased reporting & one-sided "debates" but Ofcom staff agree with their politics so don't investigate or punish.

2. Two presenters have been suspended and may lose their jobs. Is that not enough for your pound of flesh?

She even had Spiked’s Brendan O’Neill on her programme who said:

“This is an opportunistic moment for the middle-class mob, the leftish authoritarians, who’ve had GB News in their sights from the very beginning."

That was before the suspension yesterday of a third GB News presenter, Calvin Robinson.

Robinson had issued a statement criticising his bosses while announcing that he would not appear on the channel in solidarity with presenter Dan Wootton who had been suspended for his part in the Laurence Fox debacle.

Although I admire his loyalty to a colleague, I think it’s unwise to criticise your bosses so publicly, especially as the execs at GB News had no choice, really, because they’re fighting to keep the channel on air and their duty of care extends to all their employees, not just a handful of extreme ‘free speech’ martyrs.

As an aside, before the annual Battle of Ideas began, many years ago, the Academy of Ideas hosted a conference called ‘Freedom and its Limits’ and, hard though it is for some people to accept, there are limits, even to ‘free speech’, especially if you’re broadcasting on a regulated platform.

If you don’t want the credibility of being part of a regulated broadcast industry, go online.

That said, what I can’t stand is the way many rival broadcasters and commentators have piled in. Why, for example, did BBC radio presenter Nihal Arthanayake feel the need to tweet:

I once had Calvin Robinson on my show, he made little sense, it was like playing tennis with someone who only served at you, except he was holding a cricket bat and was using mouldy plums instead of tennis balls. It was bizarre.

When Robinson replied …

I do not remember, but you are welcome. I donated my time to you in good faith and supported your livelihood. Again, you are welcome. I hope other potential guests see your tweet and reconsider accepting.

… Arthanayake responded, even more churlishly:

Oh, I remember you. It was an utter waste of time. I have an amazing array of thoughtful eloquent guests, you were neither. Enjoy your time off.

Nice.

It reminded me of a post I wrote in December 2021 following the news that the New Zealand government intended to ban the sale of tobacco to anyone born after 2008.

You can read it in full here (‘Balance and the BBC’) but here’s an extended passage:

I don’t know how other BBC programmes covered the subject, or whether they covered it all, but on Five Live presenter Nihal Arthanayake chose to discuss the issue with Hazel Cheeseman of the anti-smoking group ASH which hardly screams ‘balance’.

I was unaware of the interview until ASH tweeted a short clip. Forest’s response was to retweet it with the words ‘There are two sides to this debate' and tag @TherealNihal.

To be fair Arthanayake was quick to reply but his reaction was revealing. He declined to comment directly but instead tweeted a link to a page on the NHS website that reads:

Smoking is one of the biggest causes of death and illness in the UK. Every year around 78,000 people in the die from smoking, with many more living with debilitating smoking-related illnesses.

In response we wrote:

The health risks of smoking are very well known but this debate is also about freedom of choice and personal responsibility. Any chance you might give some airtime to that as well?

Clearly not because Arthanayake’s next tweet read:

Ok, just focus on this line then 'Every year around 78,000 people in the UK die from smoking.' and ruminate on that.

Having focussed (and ruminated) on that we replied:

Thank you, we are well aware of that, but there’s another side to this debate - freedom of choice & personal responsibility - that you overlook. Oh, and pleasure. Millions of adults enjoy smoking, despite the health risks, and don’t want to quit. Their views should be heard too.

His response to this read:

So to be clear, for the sake of balance, you want the chance to talk positively about something that the NHS says kills over 70,000 people a year?

To which we replied:

We aren’t denying the serious health risks associated with smoking but there are alternative and perfectly legitimate views on smoking that deserve to be heard on the BBC and elsewhere. Your listeners might find them interesting.

We then posted two links.

The first was to an article by artist David Hockney, 84, a confirmed smoker, who earlier this year gave an impassioned defence of smoking (Britain needs a cigarette) for UnHerd.

The second was a link to a 2004 BBC Newsnight film in which Hockney said of smoking, “It’s a serious subject because the subject is liberty” adding, “I smoke for my health, my mental health.”

Arthanayake didn’t respond to either so I don't know what he thought of Hockney's comments even though they reflect the views of many people, smokers and non-smokers alike.

What is depressing is that a leading presenter on a national BBC radio station appears to have set himself up as judge and jury on smoking and won’t acknowledge that a discussion on the subject is rather more complicated and nuanced that the bald statement that 'around 78,000 people in the UK die from smoking'.

It’s as if he has listened to one side (the prosecution) and decided that whatever case the defence might have it’s not worth listening to because the prosecution has already won the argument.

Indeed, if I understand him correctly (he may wish to correct me), Arthanayake seems to think that the health risks of smoking are so great that they outweigh any debate or discussion that might (shock, horror) offer a more positive/alternative view of smoking.

As readers know, Forest has never encouraged anyone to start smoking and we fully acknowledge the health risks associated with the habit.

Nevertheless we cling to the old-fashioned view that, in a liberal and mature society, the ability to make informed choices and take responsibility for our own health - especially when it involves known risk factors such as diet, alcohol and combustible tobacco - are principles worth fighting for, and discussing.

I added that:

I was on Arthanayake's show once but it was several years ago and I've never been invited back. Was it something I said?!

I should add that I’ve been interviewed, once, by Calvin Robinson (in August 2022) and although he was obviously inexperienced as a presenter you couldn’t fault his willingness to listen to both sides of the debate because also on the programme was “stop smoking expert” Louise Ross.

Arthanayake is clearly the more polished broadcaster (hardly surprising, he's been a BBC presenter for over two decades), but at least Robinson (and GB News) was willing to have that discussion. See ‘GB News - should smoking be banned?’.

You can also watch it here.

Wednesday
Sep272023

Mr Joe Jackson presents …

Joe Jackson has produced a new album, his first since ‘Fool’ in 2019.

‘What A Racket!’ will be released in November. But it’s not what you might expect.

According to today’s announcement the new album revives the songs of ‘enigmatic early 20th-century English music hall artist Max Champion’:

‘What A Racket!' presents eleven of Max Champion’s songs for the first time in more than a century. According to producer Joe Jackson, ‘These were wonderful songs in their time, but they’re surprisingly modern, too. Sometimes it’s almost as if Max is speaking, from his London of the early 20th century, directly to us in the early 21st.’

A good example, we are told, is 'Health and Safety,' released today as a single. Sample lyric:

'Health and safety,
What's it all about?
Put that pint down,
Stub the gasper out.'

Click on the image above to hear a snippet. You can also read the full announcement here.

I’d love to see the album performed live, preferably in an old style music hall, if such things still exist.

Failing that, one of the larger working men’s clubs that journalist Pete Brown wrote about in his book Clubland, and which I wrote about here.

Then again, the London Palladium is a great venue for panto so it wouldn’t be a huge leap to recreate the look and feel of an Edwardian music hall on stage and in the auditorium.

Either way, the album sounds like fun. You can pre-order it here.

See also: Joe Jackson - Sing, You Sinners!

Wednesday
Sep272023

Tomorrow!

OK, this is small beer but, for the record ...

I was invited to appear on The Nolan Show on BBC Radio Ulster yesterday. Naturally, I accepted, but after waiting, and waiting, for a call that never came, I received a text:

Apologies that we couldn't get to you this morning, the lead story just overran unfortunately. Just wondering how you are fixed for tomorrow?

Fair enough, that happens, so I happily made myself available again and this morning I waited ... and waited. Eventually I sent them a text:

Are you doing this story?

Reply:

Finding out ... one mo ...

Then:

Sadly not. Sorry to ask again but same time tomorrow?

Hmmm.

Talking of interviews, I was also sounded out about going on GB News on Monday night.

I had a chat with Dan Wootton's producer and, to be fair, it was made clear it was a preliminary enquiry only.

A few hours later I received a follow up text:

Thanks for speaking earlier and thank you for being available. Sadly we're not the item anymore. Hopefully another time though.

At least they didn't leave me hanging. Given subsequent developments, however, I may have dodged a bullet!

Update: I am now scheduled to be on BBC Radio Ulster at 10.00am tomorrow (Thursday).

Monday
Sep252023

Smokers of the world unite!

Further to the report that appeared on the Guardian website on Friday evening and in the print edition on Saturday ...

Forest's response to 'Rishi Sunak considers banning cigarettes for next generation' was reported by The Sun, Mirror, Independent, i, and Financial Times.

We were also quoted by the Press Association and that led to our comments appearing in numerous online reports including the London Evening Standard, City AM, Daily Record, The National, The Herald, STV News, ITV News, Birmingham Mail, Plymouth Herald, Coventry Telegraph, Hull Daily Mail and many more.

On Saturday I was on LBC (with Hazel Cheeseman of ASH) but more interesting was the decision by the BBC to interview two leading anti-smoking campaigners – Cheeseman and Prof Robert West – on the PM programme with not a single opposing voice.

In fact, the only difference between Cheeseman and West was that ASH's deputy CEO supported raising the age of sale of tobacco from 18 to 21 (the American model) while West supported the New Zealand model, raising the age of sale by one year every year until no-one can legally buy tobacco.

Apart from that, they were in complete agreement. Well done, the BBC!

Elsewhere, a couple of comments stood out.

Interviewed by Trevor Phillips on Sky News, America author and journalist Lionel Shriver responded to reports that the prime minister wants to stop young adults smoking by describing Britain as a "heavy-handed nanny state". The UK, she said, is "increasingly authoritarian".

Meanwhile, on social media, Winston Marshall, the former member of Mumford & Sons, tweeted:

There's a proud 450 year British tradition of tobacco including cigars, pipes, cigarettes and we are world leaders in snuff.

Tobacco duties raise £10b/year

There are countless small British businesses in tobacco

Tobacco is a refined pleasure that every Brit should have the right to enjoy

Banning it will only create a black market, destroy a legitimate industry, kill 0.4% of national income

And we will smoke anyway

Smokers of the world unite!

Hands off @RishiSunak

Anyway, we'll be discussing all this in exactly seven days at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester when Forest is hosting a panel in the IEA/TPA Think Tent.

Title: Smoking Gun – The infantilisation of Britain.

Summary: The Conservative government says it’s committed to making England ‘smoke free’ by 2030. We are also told that tackling smoking (and vaping) will be a priority for the next Labour government. Is the ongoing war on tobacco justified, or is this a classic case of government overreach, with adults being treated like ignorant and unruly children?

How topical is that?!

I'm chairing and our speakers are Reem Ibrahim, communications officer at the IEA (who also discussed the issue on LBC and Five Live at the weekend); Mark Oates, director of We Vape; and Chris Snowdon, head of lifestyle economics at the IEA.

Looking forward to it!