Where is the FTC ?

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trying

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I still do not understand why the FTC has not imposed the same media ban it has for tobacco products on E-cigs, since they were declared to be tobacco products ?

While the FDA is required to take time to set up guidelines to regulated a new tobacco product. For the FTC it is much simpler, either it is or it is not a tobacco product.
 

Bill Godshall

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trying wrote

I still do not understand why the FTC has not imposed the same media ban it has for tobacco products on E-cigs, since they were declared to be tobacco products ?

In 1969 US Congress amended the Federal Cigarette Labelling and Advertising Act to ban cigarette ads on tv and radio, and Congress directed the FTC to implement the regulation.

And as I recall, US Congress banned smokeless tobacco ads on tv and radio in 1986 when it enacted the Comprehensive Smokeless Tobacco Education Act (which also required inaccurate and misleading warning labels on smokeless tobacco products).

Not sure if trying wants the FTC to ban e-cigarette ads on tv and radio, but I see no justification for the agency to do so, and the FTC probably doesn't have the legal authority to do so (until/unless Congress requires the agency to do so).

Besides, in 2009, US Congress authorized the FDA to regulate tobacco products.
 

Rickajho

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I'm not exactly sure what point you are making. Since you are located in the USA, if you are referring to the only ads I have seen for e-cigs "as seen on TeeVee" they go very much out of their way to not say the product contains tobacco related anything. "Just water vapor..." - as incorrect as that may be as one actor states in one of the ads. Some explicitly state their products contain no tobacco.

Based on your premise, what would there be to regulate then? It is my understanding that the FDA is still doing it's own dance deciding what to do with e-cigs - or not. The last I read on ecf is the FDA is looking into regulating the sales of e-cigs as tobacco. And so far they haven't moved any further on even looking into it.
 

Bill Godshall

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Back in April, when the FDA conceded to comply with Judge Leon's ruling that e-cigarettes are tobacco products at
Regulation of E-Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products
the agency stated

The Agency intends to propose a regulation that would extend the Agency’s “tobacco product” authorities in Chapter IX of the FD&C Act, which currently only apply to certain specifically enumerated “tobacco products,” to other categories of tobacco products that meet the statutory definition of “tobacco product” in Section 201(rr) of the Act. The additional tobacco product categories would be subject to general controls, such as registration, product listing, ingredient listing, good manufacturing practice requirements, user fees for certain products, and the adulteration and misbranding provisions, as well as to the premarket review requirements for “new tobacco products” and “modified risk tobacco products.”

On October 14, US Senate Democrats Blumenthal, Lautenberg & Brown wrote to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg at
http://www.cspdigitals.com/tobaccoenews/tom-letter.pdf
urging the FDA to "swiftly" expand Chapter IX of FSPTCA to apply to all tobacco products including cigars, pipe tobacco, hookah, dissolvables and accessories (they forgot to include e-cigarettes, but e-cigs will be included if FDA proposes this type of regulation).

That letter also falsely accused the tobacco industry of undermining the FSPTCA, criticized companies for marketing exponentially less hazardous smokefree alternatives to smokers, and grossly misrepresented the health risks/benefits and marketing practices of smokefree products.

Prior to that, on June 16, Senators Merkley, Brown and 10 other Democrats sent a letter at
http://www.ktvz.com/news/28300863/detail.html to Margaret Hamburg pressuring the FDA to reverse its ruling that Star's Ariva BDL and Stonewall BDL aren't smokeless tobacco products (as defined by FSPTCA). That letter also grossly exaggerated the health/safety risks of dissolvable tobacco (that now includes nicotine lozenges), falsely claimed the products are marketed to youth, and called them candy.

But back to the subject of this thread, since Chapter IX of the FSPTCA doesn't ban television or radio ads for cigarettes or smokeless tobacco, I don't think e-cig ads would be banned on television or radio even if the FDA approved a regulation that applied Chapter IX to e-cigs.

However, if FDA proposes and then gives final approval to a regulation to apply Chapter IX to e-cigarettes, Section 910 could/would effectively ban the sale of many/most/all e-cigarette products currently on the US market because it could/would ban all e-cig products that weren't on the market before February 15, 2007.
And if Chapter IX is applied to e-cigarettes, Section 911 also would make it a federal felony for any e-cigarette manufacturer or importer to truthfully claim that e-cigarettes are less hazardous alternatives to cigarettes.

Tobacco prohibitionists and Congressional Democrats who oppose tobacco harm reduction want the FDA to quickly propose and approve that type of regulation (i.e. applying Chapter IX to e-cigs, dissolvables, cigars, pipe tobacco, hookah and other currently unregulated tobacco products) in the next 12 months (during Obama's first term) because they are properly concerned that Obama won't win reelection, and because they know that a Republican president won't allow the FDA to propose or approve that type of regulation.

So we need to prevent the FDA from approving a new regulation that would apply Chapter IX to e-cigarettes before next year's election.
 
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