Smoke Gets in Your Aye
Can Congress say yes to a deal when new evidence shows how Big Tobacco targeted teens?
By Richard Lacayo
WASHINGTON (TIME, Jan. 26) -- The main reason the tobacco companies so badly want Congress to
approve the $368 billion deal they cut last year with the states
is that it offers them immunity against future lawsuits. And the
main reason they want immunity is to save money. But they also
want to save face. In every tobacco lawsuit, plaintiffs can
demand and make public the industry's internal documents, even
as a condition of cases settled out of court. Just how damaging
those disclosures can be is plainer than ever since last week,
when a California suit opened a flood of secret industry papers.
What many of them seem to show is the second largest U.S.
cigarette maker scheming like mad to lure smokers as young as 14.
These are not the first disclosures to hint at an industry
campaign to dominate the, ahem, younger-adult market. But the 81
internal documents from R.J. Reynolds, released by Democratic
Representative Henry Waxman of California, are by far the most
unflinching public view of a company determined to get those
kids. In a 1975 memo, company official J.W. Hind urged R.J.R.,
maker of Camel, Winston and Salem, to "increase its share
penetration among the 14-24 age group." One year later, a
10-year planning forecast prepared for the board of directors
and stamped RJR SECRET noted that 14-to-18-year-olds were "an
increasing segment of the smoking population" and proposed a
brand aimed at them.
After a confidential 1980 memo warned executives to change their
terminology, company documents referred less often to the
14-to-18-year-old market. But they went on talking about how to
target "younger adult smokers," a term that encompassed
teenagers in earlier company discussions. By 1988 Joe Camel had
arrived in America.
As bad as the California papers are, there could be worse to
come from a Minnesota lawsuit brought by Blue Cross and Blue
Shield and Hubert H. ("Skip") Humphrey, the state's attorney
general and Democratic gubernatorial candidate. With jury
selection scheduled to start this week, Humphrey has 33 million
pages of industry papers that he says provide not just a smoking
gun but "a howitzer" against tobacco. To avoid a long and
potentially embarrassing trial in Texas, cigarette makers opted
last week for a $15 billion settlement of a lawsuit there. If a
judge approves it, the companies will pay the state that much
over 25 years to compensate for health-care costs and to fund
antismoking programs. After Minnesota's case, there are nearly
40 state suits pending.
The industry that used to fight to the death is now flinching,
partly because it can't afford more embarrassment just as
Congress is approaching a tobacco settlement. In the Senate,
Republican John McCain of Arizona, no friend of tobacco, is
predicting a ferocious fight. To begin with, the deal is
nobody's baby in Washington. "Congress is not inclined to simply
embrace an arrangement negotiated by the attorneys general with
Big Tobacco in a hotel room," says a Republican aide. Some
members of Clinton's circle, including Vice President Al Gore
and Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala, are
arguing hard against the deal, saying it's soft on tobacco.
Even Republicans, who know that tobacco companies are their
party's largest campaign contributors, don't want to get too
closely identified with a deal brokered by Evil Weed Inc. What
they fear is a Clinton trap in which they commit themselves to
the deal, only to have the White House back out, painting them
as slaves to tobacco money, a move that would also deflect heat
from Democrats on campaign finance. If Republicans aren't
persuaded that a deal will give them cover, it won't happen.
That's why Senate majority leader Trent Lott is saying it has no
better than a 30% chance of passage.
Clinton, whose next budget already plans to spend $60 billion
from the deal for such programs as child care and biomedical
research, says the California papers show "more than ever why it
is absolutely imperative that Congress take action now." But he
still refuses to put forward his legislative proposal. "If the
President's serious about this," says Oklahoma Senator Don
Nickles, "let's see his bill." Republicans are also wary of
being blamed for the billions that lawyers stand to take away
from the deal or for the fact that it's sure to involve a tax
increase of as much as $1.50 a pack.
Both parties have congressional leaders from states with
vulnerable tobacco farmers. Yet even Thomas Bliley of Virginia,
chairman of the House Commerce Committee and a Republican
sometimes known as "the Congressman from tobacco," is wary
enough of that title to have scheduled hearings next week at
which heads of all the major cigarette companies will have to
appear under oath. It could bring back memories of the 1994
hearing at which seven executives swore under oath that they
never targeted kids.
--Reported by John F. Dickerson and Bruce van Voorst/Washington
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