Obama is scheduled to sign the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control
Act during an event Monday in the Rose Garden. The law allows the FDA to reduce
nicotine in tobacco products, ban candy flavorings and block labels such
"low tar" and "light." Tobacco companies also will be
required to cover their cartons with large graphic warnings.
The law won't let the FDA ban nicotine or tobacco outright, but the agency
will be able to regulate what goes into tobacco products, make public the
ingredients and prohibit marketing campaigns, especially those geared toward
children.
Anti-smoking advocates looked forward to the bill after years of attempts to
control an industry so fundamental to the
Opponents from tobacco-growing states like top-producing
As president, George W. Bush opposed the legislation and threatened a veto
after it passed the House last year. The Obama administration, by contrast,
issued a statement declaring strong support for the measure.
Obama has spoken publicly of his own struggles to quit cigarettes.
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