Portions of this book draw heavily on the following research: B. Samuels and S. Glantz, ―The politics of local tobacco control‖ , JAMA 1991;266:2110-2117
copyright American Medical Association, 1991; M. Traynor, M. Begay, and S. Glantz, ―New tobacco industry strategy to prevent local tobacco control‖ , JAMA
1993;270:479-486 copyright American Medical Association, 1993; H. Macdonald and S. Glantz, ―Political realities of statewide smoking legislation: The passage of
Californias Assembly Bill AB 13‖ , Tobacco Control 1994;4:1081-1085 copyright BMJ Publishing Group; M. Traynor and S. Glantz, ―Californias tobacco tax
initiative: The development and passage of Proposition 99‖ , JHPPL 1996;21:543- 585; S. Glantz, J. Slade, L. Bero, P. Hanauer, D. Barnes, The cigarette papers
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996; H. Macdonald, S. Aguinaga, and S.
Glantz, ―The defeat of Philip Morris California Uniform Tobacco Control Act,‖ Am J Pub Health 1997; 87:1989-1996 copyright American Public Health Association,
1997; E. Balbach and S. Gla ntz, ―Tobacco control advocates must demand high-
quality media campaigns‖ , Tobacco Control 1998; 7:397-408; copyright BMJ Publishing Group. We thank the copyright holders for permission to use this
material.
1. Introduction
― 1 ― New Years Day 1998 was crisp and clear along the coast just north of San Francisco,
a fine day for a hike. Stanton Glantz, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, and longtime tobacco control advocate, joined a group of friends to hike
from high on Mt. Tamalpais down to the ocean. At the end of the trail, the hikers would meet other friends at a bar in Stinson Beach for a drink and lunch. As they
approached the bar, Glantz wondered what would happen there. On January 1, 1998, after all, every bar in California was to become smoke free. Glantz had actually
opposed the state law making bars smoke free because he doubted that the state legislature would stand up to the tobacco industry and pass a strong law. He also
believed that such matters were best left to local communities. The tobacco industry had already mounted a major campaign to encourage people to ignore the law. By
then, however, most people thought Glantz was responsible for the law. He expected to walk into another smoky bar and hear comments from his friends that he had gone
too far.
But he was pleasantly surprised. A couple of people stood outside the bar smoking cigarettes, but the air inside was smoke free. Bars, the last bastion of smoking, were
smoke free. California had indeed come a long way since 1978, when attorneys Peter Hanauer and Paul Loveday had recruited Glantz for an ill-fated effort to pass a state
law requiring nonsmoking sections in restaurants. They did not even dare think about bars.
― 2 ―
The Changing Environment of Tobacco
The landscape surrounding tobacco was not changing merely in California. By New Years Day 1998, tobacco was a highly visible issue in American politics. President
Bill Clinton allowed his Food and Drug Administration to assert jurisdiction over tobacco products as drug delivery devices. Forty-one states had sued the tobacco
industry for defrauding the public out of billions of dollars that taxpayers had spent to treat sick smokers; the states would soon force the tobacco industry to pay 200
billion to reimburse them for part of those costs.
[1]
Thousands of individuals sued the industry and some won. The industry was being forced to accept controls
—albeit limited
—on its advertising practices. Millions of pages of previously secret tobacco industry documents were made public, first in print,
[2-7]
then on the Internet and in a depository created from the documents that Attorney General Hubert Humphrey III of
Minnesota forced the tobacco industry to make public. These documents showed that the tobacco industry had known for decades that nicotine is addictive and that
smoking causes a wide variety of diseases. They also demonstrated how the tobacco industry used its considerable public relations, legal, and political muscle to hide this
information from the public and the courts. Later in 1998 Congress had a rancorous debate over whether to enact national tobacco control legislation that put some
restrictions on the tobacco industry in exchange for giving it legal immunity. In the end, Congress strengthened public health provisions of the proposed legislation to the
point that the tobacco industry and its political allies killed it.
This burst of activity reflected the groundwork that had been laid over the previous two decades by tobacco control activists who had been working all over the United
States to change how people viewed the tobacco industry and its behavior. Beginning in the 1980s, California activists, led by Hanauer and Loveday, created hundreds of
city and county ordinances to protect nonsmokers from secondhand smoke and otherwise restrict the tobacco industry by working through their city and county
officials. These local activists created strong public support for tobacco control policies. Even so, the tobacco industry continued to dominate the California
Legislature, where tobacco control policies had scant support.
But in 1988 activists from the environmental movement and the American Lung Association and American Cancer Society reacted to this legislative impasse by
creating the largest and most innovative program
― 3 ― in the world through the initiative process, by which voters enact a law by popular
vote. California voters enacted an initiative known as Proposition 99, which increased the tobacco tax by twenty-five cents a pack and devoted 20 percent of the money
raised to fund a tobacco control program. Virtually overnight, Californias investment in tobacco control went from almost nothing to over 100 million a year in schools,
communities, and counties and at the state level. In addition, nearly 20 million a year was available to California researchers to conduct tobacco-related research. These
programs dwarfed anything that any other state or the federal government had ever done on tobacco.
Far from running a traditional ―smoking will kill you‖ campaign, the California effort viewed tobacco as a social and political problem and went after the tobacco industry
directly and aggressively. The network of local tobacco control advocates that
Proposition 99 created lit the afterburners on the nonsmokers rights movement. Communities started passing clean indoor air and other tobacco control ordinances so
fast that it was hard to keep track of them all. The culture around tobacco was changing. The initial results of the California campaign were nothing short of
amazing: it tripled the rate of decline in tobacco use.
[8]
Unfortunately for the public health, the tobacco industry appreciated that this campaign was costing it billions of
dollars in lost sales and mobilized to divert the money from tobacco control and to constrain the program to ineffective strategies. Nevertheless, the California
experience shows that it is possible to rapidly reduce tobacco consumption if the political will is there to do it.
The tobacco industry was not alone in its efforts to divert money from tobacco control programs. Organized medicine and other constituencies that wanted more money
spent on medical services for the poor spearheaded the lobbying effort to redirect money into medical services. Politicians in both parties were happy to do the
industrys bidding in exchange for campaign contributions or because of a common ideological position.
[9-11]
In 1994, after several years of rapid reductions in tobacco use, the industry brought this progress to a halt.
[12]
For public health advocates, success in political arenas required that they set aside the conciliatory tactics they had relied on in the past and learn to be more confrontational
in dealing directly with the tobacco industry. However, they were less willing to confront the industrys surrogates, especially organized medicine or powerful
politicians.
While the story of tobacco control in California reflects the individuals and organizations who were involved, the story is relevant
― 4 ― everywhere. The tobacco industrys efforts to influence state and local programs are
controlled nationally, and the patterns in California have reappeared wherever public health advocates try to clean the air or control the tobacco industry. As a new century
begins, more and more states are implementing large-scale tobacco control programs, often through dedicated tobacco taxes or as parts of settlements of lawsuits with the
tobacco industry. Massachusetts was the first state to follow California, when voters there passed Question 1 in 1992; Arizona was next in 1994, followed by Oregon in
1996.
[13-17]
Other states, including Wisconsin, Michigan, and Maine, created tobacco control programs through the legislative process, and Florida, Minnesota, Texas, and
Mississippi, among others, did so through legal settlements with the tobacco industry.
Recurring Themes
The story of the battle over tobacco control in California has several recurring universal themes.
First, although health promotion and medical care have a logical connection, there has always been a tension between them in the allocation of tax dollars. In the battles over
the Proposition 99 revenues, the existence of an a priori agreement between those involved in health promotion and those involved in medical care did little to curtail
these battles. Moreover, the financial and political interests of organized medicine often had more in common with the tobacco industry than the public health
groups,
[18][19]
who had been marginal players in California politics before Proposition 99 passed. Despite the fact that these groups successfully defeated the tobacco
industry in a major electoral contest to pass Proposition 99, it was hard for them to understand their power and wield it after the election.
Second, it is easiest to make policy in areas where there is a clear consensus on how to achieve the programs goals. Before Proposition 99, no one had ever run a large-
scale tobacco control program and no one knew exactly how to do it. In contrast, everyone knew how to spend money on direct medical services. This difference,
combined with the lack of precedent for mounting a prevention program of the magnitude of the one created by Proposition 99, complicated the health advocates
task. The absence of a proven approach to reduce tobacco use could have been mitigated with a long time frame to develop and implement the program and a careful
evaluation process. Politicians, however, who tend to rely
― 5 ― on short schedules and temporary settlements, did not allow enough time for such a
process, even though Proposition 99s tobacco control program was breaking new ground. This situation led anti-tobacco advocates to make early compromises that
would come back to haunt them.
Third, programs tend to remain in place once established. Temporary agreements or one-time diversions of funds, as happened when tobacco control proponents agreed to
allow some anti-tobacco education money to be used for medical services, become precedents in subsequent budget years because operating programs build their own
constituencies.
Fourth, and finally, informed and activated public opinion is a powerful weapon in health policy generally and on tobacco policy specifically. When tobacco policy is left
to the inside game played in back rooms, the outcome will favor the existing power structure. The tobacco industry is a tough, experienced inside player who has
benefited from the existing power structure. In contrast, the public health groups power is amplified in public arenas, where tobacco industrys power is sharply
curtailed.
Conclusion
The California experience shows that it is possible to dramatically change how people think about tobacco and the tobacco industry and rapidly reduce tobacco
consumption. Based on the initial results of the program, the state was on its way to reducing tobacco consumption by 75 percent in just ten years.
[20-22]
The California story shows that it is possible to run such programs successfully as long as the public
health community exerts power effectively. It also shows that it is possible for the tobacco industry and its political allies to weaken or destroy these programs when the
public health community is timid. The tobacco industry, faced with losing billions of dollars in sales, is highly motivated and aggressive. The controlling factor in the
outcome is whether the public health community is willing to directly confront this
reality and devote the organizational resources —both financial and political—to
beating the tobacco industry. Victory is possible but not easy, and it requires constant, determined vigilance.
While Proposition 99 passed in 1988, it had its origins over a decade earlier, in the emergence of the nonsmokers rights movement. In contrast to the large voluntary
health organizations, the grassroots advocates of nonsmokers rights saw political and policy interventions as the key to doing something about tobacco. Rather than
convincing one person at
― 6 ― a time to stop smoking, they fought to enact laws requiring smoke-free workplaces,
public places, and restaurants.
[23][24]
Their efforts brought about systemic, environmental changes that had an impact on how citizens viewed the tobacco
industry and their rights as nonsmokers. They made smoke-free bars not only possible but reasonable.
The California story begins with them.
Notes
1. Pringle P. Cornered: Big tobacco at the bar of justice. New York: Henry Holt, 1998.
2. Glantz S, Slade J, Bero L, Hanauer P, Barnes L. The cigarette papers. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996.
3. Glantz SA, Barnes DE, Be ro L, Hanauer P, Slade J. ―Looking through a keyhole at
the tobacco industry: The Brown and Williamson documents‖ . JAMA 1995;274:219- 224.
4. Hanauer P, Slade J, Barnes DE, Bero L, Glantz SA. ―Lawyer control of internal scientific research to avoid products liability lawsuits: The Brown and Williamson
documents‖ . JAMA 1995;274:234-240. 5. Bero L, Barnes DE, Hanauer P, Slade J, Glantz SA. ―Lawyer control of the tobacco
industrys external research program: The Brown and Williamson documents‖ . JAMA 1995;274:241-247.
6. Barnes DE, Hanauer P, Slade J, Bero LA, Glantz SA. ―Environmental tobacco smoke: The Brown and Williamson documents‖ . JAMA 1995;274:248-253.
7. Slade J, Bero L, Hanauer P, Barnes DE, Glantz SA. ―Nicotine and addiction: The Brown and Williamso
n documents‖ . JAMA 1995;274:225-233. 8. Glantz SA. ―Changes in cigarette consumption, prices, and tobacco industry
revenues associated with Californias Proposition 99‖ . Tobacco Control 1993;2:311- 314.
9. Begay ME, Traynor M, Glantz SA. ―The tobacco industry, state politics, and
tobacco education in California‖ . Am J Pub Health 1993;839:1214-1221. 10. Begay ME, Glantz SA. ―Tobacco industry campaign contributions are affecting
tobacco control policymaking in California‖ . JAMA 1994;27215:1176-1182. 11. Monardi F, Glantz SA. ―Are tobacco industry campaign contributions influencing
state legislative behavior?‖ Am J Pub Health 1998;886:918-923. 12. Pierce JP, Gilpin EA, Emery SL, White M, Rosbrook B, Berry C. ―Has the
Californi a Tobacco Control Program reduced smoking?‖ JAMA 1998;28010:893-
899. 13. Koh HK. ―An analysis of the successful 1992 Massachusetts tobacco tax
initiative‖ . Tobacco Control 1996;53:220-225. 14. Heiser PF, Begay ME. ―The campaign to raise the tobacco tax in Massachusetts‖ .
Am J Pub Health 1997;876:968-973.
15. Aguinaga S, Glantz S. Tobacco control in Arizona, 1973-1997. San Francisco: Institute for Health Policy Studies, School of Medicine, University of California at
San Francisco, 1997 October. http:www.library.ucsf.edutobaccoaz
16. Bialous SA, Glantz SA. ―Arizonas tobacco control initiative illustrates the need for continuing oversight by tobacco control advocates‖ . Tobacco Control
1999;8:141-151.
17. Goldman LK, Glantz SA. Tobacco industry political expenditures and tobacco policy making in Oregon: 1985-1997. San Francisco: Institute for Health Policy
Studies, School of Medicine, University of California at San Francisco, 1998 June. http:www.library.ucsf.edutobaccoor
18. Wolinsky H, Brune T. The serpent on the staff. New York: G. P. Putnams Sons, 1994.
19. Sharfstein J. ―1996 congressional campaign priorities of the AMA: Tackling tobacco or limiting malpractice awards?‖ Am J Pub Health 1998;88:1233-1236.
20. Pierce JP, Gilpin EA, Emery SL, Farkas AJ, Zhu SH, Choi WS, Berry CC, Distefan JM, White MM, Soroko S, Navarro A. Tobacco control in California: Whos
winning the war? San Diego: University of California at San Diego, June 30, 1998.
21. Pierce JP, Evans N, Farkas AJ, Cavin SW, Berry C, Kramer M, Kealey S, Rosbrook B, Choi W, Kaplan RM. Tobacco use in California: An evaluation of the
Tobacco Control Program, 1989-1993. La Jolla: University of California, San Diego, 1994.
22. Pierce JP. ―Evaluating Proposition 99 in California‖ . Speech: American Heart Association, Nineteenth Science Writers Forum, January 12-15, 1992.
23. Glantz S. ―Achieving a smokefree society‖ . Circulation 1987;76:746-752. 24. Sallis JF, Owen N. ―Ecological models‖ . In: Glanz K, Lewis FM, Rimer BK, eds.
Health behavior and health education. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1997. pp. 403- 424.
― 7 ―
2. Beginnings: The Nonsmokers Rights Movement