Tobacco

Cherie Blair to Represent Club Owner on Smoking Ban Challenge

Tony Blair's wife, lawyer and barrister Cherie Blair, is representing David West, the owner of the sex-themed London nightclub Hey Jo. The flamboyant, pink-suited millionaire is challenging the U.K.

Channeling Fox through the Wall Street Journal?

  • Topics: Media, Tobacco
  • As Australian-born media magnate Rupert Murdoch gets ever closer to adding the coveted Wall Street Journal to his media empire, it is instructive to examine how Murdoch's ownership and corporate relationships have affected media coverage in the past. Information on this can be found in tobacco industry documents.

    Mark Penn, Hillary Clinton and Big Tobacco

    Mark Penn, CEO of the global PR firm Burson-Marsteller (B-M) and president of the polling firm Penn, Schoen and Berland Associates (PSB), feels misunderstood.

    Penn was recently in the news when several union officials expressed concern that Democratic Presidential aspirant Hillary Clinton had hired him as a "key strategic adviser," even though B-M has a specialist unit that advises clients on defeating union campaigns. Not surprisingly, Clinton's campaign shrugged off the criticism, insisting that he is a "vital member of our team." In an email to Atlantic Online, Penn wrote that that he had "never personally done such [anti-labor] work" and insisted that he has "strong personal sympathies with the labor movement." (Why someone who proclaims their pro-labor sympathies would even head up a PR firm that runs an anti-labor unit went unexplained.) Even if one accepts Penn's explanation at face value, it left me wondering who he had worked for.

    A little digging reveals that, for well over two decades, both Penn and his opinion polling company have advised the tobacco industry on how to counter the campaigns of the tobacco control movement. Based on internal tobacco industry documents, it is clear that Penn and his colleagues have little personal sympathy for those promoting policies that put public health ahead of the interests of the tobacco industry.

    New Participatory Project: Cleaning up Tobacco Documents Biographies

    [img_assist|nid=6159|title=|desc=|link=url,http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Portal:Tobacco|align=right|width=84|height=157]We need help cleaning up existing articles in our new Tobaccowiki Biographies database. Tobaccowiki is a new project to mine information from tobacco industry documents now available online.

    Big Tobacco's Racial Profiling Challenged in Court

    Gloria Tucker's mother and grandmother both smoked cigarettes. Both died from smoking-related health problems. An African American woman, Tucker believes that her loved ones' deaths were due to "racial profiling" by big tobacco companies. And she's got the documents to prove it.

    On June 7, Miami attorney J.B. Harris filed a lawsuit on Tucker's behalf. The suit seeks $1 billion in punitive damages collectively from Philip Morris USA, Lorillard Tobacco, R.J. Reynolds, and Liggett Group. It accuses the companies of using predatory marketing techniques to target African Americans. Central to the case are hundreds of tobacco industry documents that detail how companies designed cigarettes especially for African Americans; tailored marketing campaigns to lower-income, less-educated African Americans; and continued to do so long after the U.S. Surgeon General's 1964 declaration that cigarettes are hazardous to health.

    Nigeria Strikes Back at British American Tobacco

    If you think the U.S. tobacco industry is bad, you'll find the behavior of many of the same companies overseas to be truly shocking.

    Happily, the industry is beginning to be held accountable for its operations in the Global South. Nigeria's two largest states are following the lead of U.S. states, in suing British American Tobacco (BAT) of Nigeria, its U.K. parent company and Philip Morris International for the health care costs of treating sick smokers, The Times of London reported this week.

    The new lawsuits demonstrate the importance of the online public databases of previously secret tobacco industry documents. The 1998 U.S. Master Settlement Agreement required major tobacco companies to reveal millions of pages documenting unethical -- and even illegal -- marketing, public relations and lobbying campaigns. A lesser-known treasure trove is the British American Tobacco Documents Archive, which has made some seven million pages of BAT documents freely available. These documents are of particular importance to countries like Nigeria.

    How Hill & Knowlton Pioneered Unsound Science

    In the 1950s, with the link between cigarette smoking and lung cancer becoming well established, the tobacco industry was in crisis.

    Deja Vu All Over Again: Bush Admin Interference in Judicial Matters

    The Bush administration's political rigging of judicial matters is all over the news. There's the firing of the eight U.S. Attorneys. Then there's Sharon Eubanks, the lead attorney in the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) racketeering case against tobacco companies. Eubanks recently told the Washington Post that Bush appointees at DOJ pressured her to weaken the federal government's case against Big Tobacco.

    The more things change, the more they stay the same. In February 2000, the New York Times reported that then-Governor Bush's political advisor, Karl Rove, had interfered with the Texas Attorney General's plans to bring a lawsuit against major U.S. tobacco companies in order to recoup state Medicaid funds spent treating sick smokers.

    How did Rove pressure Texas Attorney General Dan Morales not to file the suit? He helped draft a 1996 push poll aimed at maligning Morales. The phone poll was financed with tobacco company money, and was carried out by a company called Public Opinion Strategies, which describes itself as a "Republican polling firm."

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