Pubdate: Wed, 24 Jun 98 Source: Bridge News Section: Forum: An Analytic Look At An Issue In The News. Contact: Website: http://www.bridge.com/ Author: Daniel J. Mitchell of the Heritage Foundation Note: OPINION ARTICLES and letters to the editor are welcome. Send submissions to Sally Heinemann, editorial director, Bridge News, 3 World Financial Center, 200 Vesey St., 28th Floor, New York, N.Y. 10281-1009. You may also call (212) 372-7510, fax (212) 372-2707 or send email OPINION: GOOD RIDDANCE TO THE TOBACCO BILL If US Politicians Truly Care About Underage Smoking, They Can Enforce Existing Laws Against Smoking By Minors WASHINGTON--The tobacco legislation recently killed by the Senate was a monstrosity that deserved to die. Supporters, led by Arizona's Sen. John McCain, a Republican, piously claimed that their goal was to stop kids from smoking. In reality, greed drove the legislation. Politicians and trial lawyers were salivating over a $516 billion pot of money and were willing to shred the Constitution and trample freedom to get their hands on the loot. The bill represented everything bad about Washington. Not only were politicians trying to enact a giant tax increase, the money would have created 17 new government bureaucracies with unprecedented powers to control our lives. HAD THE BILL been approved, the principle of individual responsibility would have suffered another blow and the lifestyle nazis would have been given a green light to pass laws dictating how much fatty food we eat and how much television we watch. The tobacco bill was so bad it's hard to peg the worst feature. Economists would probably say the tax increase was the most harmful component, provided they could even figure out just how big the tax increase was. Politicians, in their lust for other people's money, jammed the bill with direct tax increases, indirect tax increases and a smorgasbord of "penalties" that were taxes by any reasonable use of the word. All told, McCain and his colleagues were hoping to transfer more than half a trillion dollars from ordinary Americans to Washington. LEGAL SCHOLARS surely would argue that the bill was odious for the way it violated the Constitution. Restrictions on the First Amendment right to free speech (the ban on tobacco advertising) head the list, but the bill was also likely to face challenges for violating the "takings clause" and other constitutional restraints on federal action. Libertarians would protest the bill's nanny-state infringement on individual freedom. Yes, smoking is short-sighted, but so what? People should be free to make their own decisions, even dumb ones. SOME POLITICIANS argue that smokers impose costs on society when they get sick, but academic experts calculate that existing tobacco taxes already cover those costs. Besides, the real problem for society is not that people smoke but that society is forced to subsidize the health costs of smokers with cancer or heart disease. Supporters of limited government would recoil at the legislation's raft of new government spending. McCain's bill contained a frightening array of new government programs, everything from grants for expanding welfare to money for new government health programs. Perhaps most amazing was a new foreign aid program that would have sent millions of dollars to foreign governments to subsidize their anti-smoking efforts. PARTISAN REPUBLICANS would object to the bill's massive payoff of America's legion of trial lawyers. These legal vultures are major political donors to Democratic candidates. The GOP was able to add an amendment capping attorneys' fees at $4,000 an hour, but the lawyers still would have "earned" more in a day than the average American does in a year. Law enforcement officials would fault the bill's likelihood of boosting illegal smuggling. Many countries have experienced increases in black-market activity following big tax hikes on tobacco. Indeed, Sweden and Canada reduced tobacco taxes to curb illegal sales. And since cigarette smugglers already operate in America to avoid high taxes in certain states, the big federal tax increase would only add to their business. FINALLY, Americans who support freedom would take exception to the bill's reliance on police-state tactics. The anti-tobacco measure included a mandate that states conduct more than 66,000 unannounced inspections of retail establishments and require those establishments to register with the federal government if they sell tobacco. As if small businesses don't take enough grief from government, the legislation also included a provision holding retailers legally responsible for adults smoking on the sidewalk in front of their stores. For every reason imaginable, the tobacco bill would have been a disaster. If politicians truly care about underage smoking, they can enforce existing laws against smoking by minors. Of course, that approach does not give them more money and more control over people's lives, which is why it's almost a sure bet politicians will resuscitate some form of the tobacco-bill monstrosity before the year is out. DANIEL J. MITCHELL is McKenna senior fellow in political economy at the Heritage Foundation, a public-policy research institute based in Washington. His views are not necessarily those of Bridge News. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett