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The Evolution of Policy as Politics Change

This text explores the historical development of policy and politics surrounding seat belts and tobacco in the United States. It highlights the role of interest groups, government regulations, and public health concerns.

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The Evolution of Policy as Politics Change

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  1. The Evolution of Policy as Politics Change

  2. The Seat Belt Saga • First, there is popular concern about accidents • Then interest groups • Individual stories - MADD is an example • Nader and Public Interest • Unsafe at any Speed - 1965 • Insurance industry

  3. The Seat Belt Saga II • Then Congress passes the Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act • 1967 - regulation requiring seatbelts • 1972 - realized that people where not wearing the seatbelts • Regulation requiring automatic seatbelts or airbags by 1975

  4. The Seat Belt Saga III • Required cars between 1973 and 1975 to have automatic seatbelts or ignition interlocks • Chrysler v. DOT affirmed the regs • Industry choose interlocks - why? • 1974 - Congress passed a law banning regs requiring interlocks and said that all future regs on passive restraints had to be submitted to Congress for legislative veto

  5. The Seat Belt Saga IV • DOT under Ford withdrew the regs • DOT under Carter (a few months later) passed new passive restraint regs for 1982 and Congress did not veto them • 1979 - Regs were affirmed in Pacific Legal Foundation v. DOT

  6. The Seat Belt Saga V • 1981 - DOT under Reagan withdrew the regs because the car companies were going to use automatic seatbelts that could be disconnected. • 1983 - Motor Vehicles Manufacturers Assoc. V State Farm hit the United States Supreme Court

  7. The Seat Belt Saga VI • 1984 - DOT (Libby Dole) promulgated a reg requiring automatic seatbelts or airbags in all cars after 1989, unless • 2/3 of the population were covered by state seatbelt laws, and • the laws met certain criteria • What did some states do? • $5 penalty • No stop • No meaningful seatbelt defense • Most State laws did not meet the criteria

  8. The Seat Belt Saga VII • 1997 - most newer cars had airbags • 1998 - airbags kill grannies and little kids! • Nothing new - known at the time • Save many more • 1999 - You can get your airbag disconnected • Products liability issues?

  9. Tobacco in the Colonies • What was the role of tobacco in the colonial period? • How was smoking viewed by most people in the 1950s? • What happened in 1964? • Why is it so hard to quit smoking?

  10. Federal Cigarette Labeling and Advertising Act - 1965/1969 • Required hazard labeling on cigarettes • Banned cigarette advertising in electronic medial regulated by the FCC • Why not ban it everywhere? • Prevented state additional requirements • Which requirements were they worried about? • What happened in torts in 1965? • What about non-tort concerns?

  11. Public Health Impact of Tobacco • #1 preventable cause of illness • #1 problem is heart disease • 6 out of 7 smokers do not live to get lung cancer • Emphysema is the big lung issue - nasty way to live, then you die • Slow progress in limiting smoking • May have plateaued after the tobacco settlement

  12. In Defense of Tobacco • Limits retirement • Saves Medicare and Social Security • Great for private pension plans as well • Tobacco will reduce life-time health care costs if you smoke enough • Ideally you will also eat a lot of burgers • Improves job opportunities for young, cheaper workers

  13. Politics of FDA • Chairman Kessler was appointed by Bush I • Liked publicity • Wanted to keep his job when Clinton can into office • Banned silicone breast implants - just to be safe • Made 4.5 billion for trial lawyers and got to keep his job

  14. FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. • The FDA decided to regulation tobacco • What was the politics? • What had it said about tobacco regulation over the past 50 years?

  15. FDA Authority • Anything sold in interstate commerce with the intent to affect the structure or function of the body is a drug • Drugs must be proven safe and effective

  16. FDA Regulation of Tobacco • Does it fit within the definition of a drug? • What would be the effect of applying the safe and effective test to tobacco? • Does this create a regulatory paradox?

  17. Statutory Provisions • The Act prohibits "[t]he introduction or delivery for introduction into interstate commerce of any food, drug, device, or cosmetic that is adultered or misbranded." 21 U. S. C. §331(a) • §352(j) deems a drug or device misbranded "[i]f it is dangerous to health when used in the dosage or manner, or with the frequency or duration prescribed, recommended, or suggested in the labeling thereof."

  18. Tobacco Labeling • Second, a drug or device is misbranded under the Act "[u]nless its labeling bears ... adequate directions for use ... in such manner and form, as are necessary for the protection of users," except where such directions are "not necessary for the protection of the public health." §352(f)(1). • Is it possible to label tobacco so it can be used safely?

  19. Chevron - Step One • Does tobacco fall under the statute? • Is it specifically named? • Is it specifically prohibited? • Why is there a question of ambiguity in what the statute means? • Doesn't tobacco affect the body?

  20. Chevron – Step Two • What was congressional intent? • What is the evidence that congress did not intend for the FDA to regulation tobacco? • Alternative regulatory schemes and agencies? • Renewed and expanded the FDA Act without addressing tobacco

  21. United States Supreme Court Opinion • The majority (Scalia) said this was evidence that Congress did not intend for the FDA to regulate tobacco, and that such intent trumped Chevron • Minority (Breyer) said just look at the law • Politics trumps principle

  22. Lorillard Tobacco Company v. Reilly, 533 U.S. 525 (2001) • What is MA trying to do? • Types of Preemption • Explicit • Implicit • How is the United States Supreme Court's preemption analysis similar to a Chevron analysis?

  23. Preemption Language • Congress unequivocally precludes the requirement of any additional statements on cigarette packages beyond those provided in §1333. 15 U. S. C. §1334(a). • Congress further precludes States or localities from imposing any requirement or prohibition based on smoking and health with respect to the advertising and promotion of cigarettes. §1334(b).

  24. What did Congress Intend with the Cigarette Labeling Act? • What was MA's defense against preemption? • What did the court find was the congressional intent? • The context in which Congress crafted the current pre-emption provision leads us to conclude that Congress prohibited state cigarette advertising regulations motivated by concerns about smoking and health.

  25. Justice Steven's Irony • Justice Stevens finds it ironic that we conclude that "federal law precludes States and localities from protecting children from dangerous products within 1,000 feet of a school," in light of our prior conclusion that the "Federal Government lacks the constitutional authority to impose a similarly-motivated ban" in United States v. Lopez, 514 U. S. 549 (1995). • Why is this case different? • What could the state do?

  26. Smokeless Tobacco and Cigars • Are these covered by the Act? • Why? • What does the court see as the limitation on state regulation of their advertising? • What is the state's justification for limiting advertising near schools? • Why was 1000 feet too far?

  27. Actions v. Speech • Could the state ban the sale of tobacco to minors? • Can it ban the use unattended sales such as vending machines? • Can it ban tobacco sales entirely? • Why is this different from bans on advertising? • Could Congress preempt state bans on tobacco sales?

  28. What Should We Do About Tobacco Use? • What is the public interest? • What are the individual liberties issues? • Are the other substances people want to use that we ban? • Is tobacco different in any physiological, as opposed to political sense? • How well do the other bans work? • What are the unintended consequences?

  29. What About Obesity?

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