What is Rishi Sunak’s anti-smoking bill and will it pass? (2024)

Rishi Sunak’s tobacco and vapes bill aims to create the UK’s first smoke-free generation, in a landmark public health intervention.

What is the ban and how would it work?

The tobacco and vapes bill ensures anyone turning 15 from 2024, or younger, will be banned from buying cigarettes, and aims to make vapes less appealing to children.

The legislation does not ban smoking outright, as anyone who can legally buy tobacco now will still be able to do so if the bill becomes law. It will make it illegal to sell tobacco products to anyone born after 1 January 2009. The plan was first reported by the Guardian, and announced by the prime minister in his speech to the Conservative party conference last year.

It will raise the age of tobacco sale by one year every year, with the aim of stopping today’s young people from ever taking up smoking.

As well as raising the smoking age every year, the legislation includes provisions to regulate the display, contents, flavours and packaging of vapes and nicotine products.

Trading standards officers will be able to fine retailers who ignore the new restrictions, with the revenue raised funding further enforcement.

What are the arguments in favour?

Health leaders, NHS bosses and medical professionals say phasing out smoking will save thousands of lives. Smoking kills about 80,000 people a year.

Ministers say smoking rates among those aged 14-30 could be near zero by 2040 as a result of the legislation.

Prof Steve Turner, the president of the Royal College for Paediatrics and Child Health, said: “By stopping children and young people from becoming addicted to nicotine and tobacco, we decrease their chances of developing preventable diseases later in life, and will protect children from the harms of nicotine addiction.”

The government says creating a “smoke-free generation” could prevent more than 470,000 cases of heart disease, stroke, lung cancer and other diseases by the end of the century.

Government figures show smoking costs the UK about £17bn a year, including £10bn through lost productivity alone. It says this cost dwarfs the £10bn raised through taxes on tobacco products.

And against?

Some Tory MPs have expressed concerns, with the former prime minister Liz Truss saying the plans are “profoundly unconservative”, and her predecessor, Boris Johnson, describing the ban as “nuts”.

Truss said earlier this year: “A Conservative government should not be seeking to extend the nanny state. It only gives succour to those who wish to curtail freedom.”

Kemi Badenoch, the business secretary, was the only cabinet minister to vote against the bill going to a second reading, arguing that the burden of enforcement would fall on private businesses, and that the bill undermined the principle of equality.

“We should not treat legally competent adults differently in this way, where people born a day apart will have permanently different rights,” she posted on X before the vote.

Other Tory MPs object to the plans because they claim they are unworkable and could lead to other things being banned. The former cabinet minister Sir Simon Clarke said: “An enforcement nightmare and a slippery slope – alcohol next?”

How soon will the bill pass?

A final vote in the Lords is expected to take place in the middle of June after the bill passes its third reading there, but much has to happen in the Commons first.

Tuesday was MPs’ first opportunity to debate the bill and to vote on it. It cleared its first Commons hurdle by 383 votes to 67, giving a majority of 316, with the support of the Labour party.

The committee stage comes later in April, when amendments can be tabled, before there is a vote on them in May and then a vote by MPs on the bill’s third reading.

What is the likelihood it will run into political trouble?

There was opposition from 57 Conservative MPs and six ministers, including Badenoch, Julia Lopez, Lee Rowley, Alex Burghart, Steve Baker and Andrew Griffith.

The Commons leader, Penny Mordaunt was reported to be wavering but in the end abstained, one of 106 Tory MPs who did not cast a vote. Some of these will have had other reasons for staying away, such as the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, who was travelling to the International Monetary Fund in Washington.

Tory critics’ best hope for frustrating the bill will now be to overload it with amendments and slow down its passage.

Amendments are likely to include a push to introduce licensing for vaping retailers or to change the age of people affected.

Tory opponents also believe there could be more ideological opposition in the Lords.

The final vote in the Lords is expected to take place in June. While peers have been a block on Sunak’s flagship Rwanda deportation plan, they are not expected, ultimately, to stand in the way of the tobacco bill.

Which other countries have attempted a ban?

A similar law had been expected to come into effect in New Zealand in July, but was repealed by the country’s new coalition government in February. The toughest anti-tobacco rules in the world would have banned sales to people born after 2009, cut nicotine content in smoked tobacco products and cut the number of tobacco retailers by more than 90%.

Countries with notable restrictions on smoking include Mexico, which has smoking bans at beaches, parks and some homes.

Portugal is aiming to become smoke-free by 2040, with plans to ban the sale of tobacco products in bars and cafes. Meanwhile, Canada became the first country to require health warnings to be printed on individual cigarettes.

More than a quarter of the world’s population are covered by smoking bans in public spaces, according to the World Health Organization.

Of the 74 countries with smoke-free policies, Ireland was the first to ban smoking in all indoor workplaces, in 2004.

What is Rishi Sunak’s anti-smoking bill and will it pass? (2024)

FAQs

What is the new law on cigarettes in the UK? ›

The planned changes mean it would be illegal to sell cigarettes or other tobacco products to anyone born on or after 1 January 2009. This means that anyone turning 15 in 2024, and children who are younger, will never legally be sold cigarettes or other tobacco products, even after they turn 18.

How much does the average smoker spend a year in the UK? ›

The cost of smoking on your bank account

On average, smokers smoke 20 cigarettes a day; with a packet of cigarettes costing £13.30 that's a spend of £93.10 per week, or £4,841.20 per year. For that you could buy: A family holiday abroad, including hotel, flights and entertainment and spending money.

How much does the average smoker spend on cigarettes a month? ›

This means a pack-a-day habit sets you back roughly $309 per month or $3,869 per year. At today's prices, ten years of smoking comes with a $38,690 price tag. What's more, the cost of a pack of cigarettes is not the only expense.

Is 20 cigarettes a day a lot? ›

There is no safe level of smoking. Even one cigarette a day greatly increases your risk of getting problems with your heart or circulation. Here are some examples of the risks. If you smoke 20 or more cigarettes a day, your risk of having a stroke can be up to six times that of a non-smoker.

Can you legally smoke in the UK? ›

Smoking is banned in enclosed public spaces and places of work, with some exemptions. There is a legal duty for you to display a legible no-smoking sign where it can be seen by customers and staff.

What cigarettes are banned in the UK? ›

Background Menthol cigarettes have been banned in Great Britain (GB) since May 2020. Still, menthol accessories and unlabelled cigarettes perceived as mentholated are available, and people can buy menthol cigarettes overseas or illicitly.

How much do 20 cigarettes cost in the UK today? ›

In another devastating blow to smokers' wallets in 2017, the price of a 20 king-size pack rocketed to £9.99. After another tobacco tax hike in October 2021, the price of cigarettes hit a massive £13.60. Returning to present day, as of December 2023, a pack of 20 currently stands at an eye-watering £15.67.

What is the most expensive country to be a smoker? ›

According to our research, Australia is the most expensive country for smokers, with the average cost for a pack of 20 cigarettes coming in at a whopping £22.29. For someone who smoked 10 cigarettes per day, their habit would cost them £4,057 a year.

What percentage of Brits smoke? ›

About one out of every eight people in the UK smokes (12.9%). In the UK, the chance that any one person is a smoker has been going down ever since records of it began in 1974.

How many cigarettes a day is heavy smoking? ›

What is considered a heavy smoker? A heavy smoker is someone who smokes more than 20 cigarettes (about one pack) per day, and usually smokes every day. Heavy smokers are often very dependent on tobacco, which makes quitting more complex and challenging.

What is the average life span of a smoker? ›

The life expectancy of male smokers, ex-smokers, and never-smokers at age 40 years was 38.5, 40.8, and 42.4 years respectively. In women, the corresponding life expectancies were 42.4, 42.1, and 46.1 years.

How much is a pack of cigarettes in NYC? ›

This law does not apply to e-cigarettes and other vaping products. As a reminder, effective June 1, 2018, this law also increased the minimum price of cigarettes to $13.00 per pack. For more information, visit www1.nyc.gov/assets/doh/downloads/pdf/smoke/cig-min-price.pdf.

Can lungs heal after 40 years of smoking? ›

Long-time smokers will take longer for their lungs to improve. Some damage from smoking is permanent. Unfortunately, your alveoli cannot restore themselves, but stopping smoking will halt the progression of COPD and improve your ability to breathe.

Is it okay to have 1 cigarette a day? ›

Conclusions Smoking only about one cigarette per day carries a risk of developing coronary heart disease and stroke much greater than expected: around half that for people who smoke 20 per day. No safe level of smoking exists for cardiovascular disease.

How to clean lungs after smoking? ›

By drinking about 2 liters of water a day (8 glasses of water), you can thin the mucus in your lungs, making it easier for you to expel the mucus in your lungs when you cough. Drinking warm liquids such as tea, vegetable broth or warm filtered water will thin the mucus, making it easier to clear the lungs.

How many packs of cigarettes can I bring into UK? ›

Please note, this is only an example and other combinations are also allowed. 200 cigarettes, or 100 cigarillos, or 50 cigars, or 250g of tobacco* (including shisha tobacco) or 200 sticks of tobacco for heating. You can combine these allowances, provided that you do not exceed your total tobacco allowance.

Can you buy tobacco after 10pm in the UK? ›

At present tobacco can be bought at one minute past midnight until 8 p.m., but it may not be sold, except under certain conditions, between 8 p.m. and midnight. There are certain ways in which tobacco may be bought. You can buy a cooked meal on licensed premises and thus get tobacco.

Is smoking banned in Scotland? ›

In 2006 Scotland was the first UK nation to ban smoking in public places.

Are cigarette machines banned in the UK? ›

On 1 October 2011, the Protection from Tobacco (Sales from Vending Machines (England) Regulations 2010 banned the sale of tobacco from vending machines in England. The primary objective is to protect children and young people from the harm caused by smoking by making it difficult for them to obtain cigarettes.

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