stephanie
04-02-2009, 02:58 PM
The House of Representatives votes 298-to-112 to approve sweeping legislation to bring tobacco under control of the Food and Drug Administration for the first time.
By Chad Pergram
House of Representatives on Thursday approved sweeping legislation to bring tobacco under control of the Food and Drug Administration for the first time.
The vote was 298-to-112, with more than 60 Republicans joining majority Democrats in backing the legislation.
However, at least eight Democrats bucked their party and voted against the bill.
Under the bill, the Food and Drug Administration would be able to regulate, but not ban, cigarettes and other tobacco products. The FDA could make ingredients public, ban flavoring and prohibit marketing campaigns.
The plan would bolster tobacco warnings on cigarette packages and could require firms to lower nicotine levels in cigarettes.
The Senate could take up its version of the bill later this month. Supporters are confident they can get Senate passage and President Obama's signature on the bill.
"This vote brings us closer to putting a deceitful and dangerous industry under the watchful eyes of government regulators," American Heart Association CEO Nancy Brown said in a statement.
the rest here..
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/04/02/house-approves-plan-fda-regulatory-power-tobacco/
By Chad Pergram
House of Representatives on Thursday approved sweeping legislation to bring tobacco under control of the Food and Drug Administration for the first time.
The vote was 298-to-112, with more than 60 Republicans joining majority Democrats in backing the legislation.
However, at least eight Democrats bucked their party and voted against the bill.
Under the bill, the Food and Drug Administration would be able to regulate, but not ban, cigarettes and other tobacco products. The FDA could make ingredients public, ban flavoring and prohibit marketing campaigns.
The plan would bolster tobacco warnings on cigarette packages and could require firms to lower nicotine levels in cigarettes.
The Senate could take up its version of the bill later this month. Supporters are confident they can get Senate passage and President Obama's signature on the bill.
"This vote brings us closer to putting a deceitful and dangerous industry under the watchful eyes of government regulators," American Heart Association CEO Nancy Brown said in a statement.
the rest here..
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/04/02/house-approves-plan-fda-regulatory-power-tobacco/