Philip Morris
World News This Morning
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- Bradley, W.
- Brown, A.
- Clinton
- Rodgers, W.
- Bradley, W.
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Document Images
Karch 12, 1993
5:30^6:0o AM (ET)
ABC-TV
World News This Morning
Aaron Brown, anchor:
-e-
The Clinton administration has made it pr. .ty
clear how it feels about tobacco; it's banned s:aking
at the White House. And Congress is on the sami track,
-.considering legislation now that would ban smok:ag in
a ll f ederal bui ldings . Of more concern to the :o
ubacco
companies is a proposed increase in the tax on uach
pack ot.cigarettes. Here's ABC's Walter Rodgers.
Walter Rodgers reporting:
Some of those in Congress, proposing a dollar
increase in federal cigarette taxes, would clearly
like the tobacco i us ry to go the way of these
black-and-white movies.
Representative Mike Andrews (Democrat, Texas): That
would be fine. I hope we discourage every young
teenager from taking up smoking.
Rodgers: Andrews is one of a growing number of
lawmakers wanting to raise federal cigarette taxes from
twenty-four cents to a dollar a pack. With health
care costs from cigarette smoking running twenty-four
billion dollars a year, raising cigarette taxes may be
an idea whose time has come.
senator Bill Bradley (Democrat, New Jersey): The
purpose is to assure that there's adequate money to try
to take care of those thousands of Americans who get
sick every year becacis~ QY smoke.
Rodgers: But the tQbacco lobbsr~wields plenty of clout•
in this town, and`'they spent close to a million dollars
last year electing candidates who they hope are
sympathetic to their message.
Tobacco Industry Spokeswoman (unidentified): Smokers
already pay their fair share. They pay thirteen billion
dollars in taxes that non-smokers don't.
Rodgers: This latest debate over cigarettes seems not
so much a question of economics as an assault on smoking
itself.
Spokeswoman: some of these folks are very clear that
they want to make smoking so expensive through an
increase in their tax that the smoker pays that the
tobacco industry would go out of business.
Anti-Smoking Activist (unidentified): She represents a
product that kills a thousand Americans every day.
Rodgers: The president's budget director has talked
about as much as a two dollar increase in the cigarette
tax. And with anti-smoking hostility afoot, some
•increase in cigarette taxes now seems inevitable.
Walter Rodgers, ABC News, Washington.
11aX 1 5 1993
GOMr A9]ISI
