FOREST have released the results of a survey they commissioned to gauge support for the generational tobacco ban that is the centrepiece of the Tobacco and Vapes Bill. The majority of respondents are, quite sensibly, against it. 59% of respondents said that people aged 18 or over should be allowed to buy tobacco.
Sunday, 26 October 2025
Tobacco prohibition and public opinion
Monday, 20 October 2025
The battle for the gambling levy millions
Last month the gambling journalist Zak Thomas-Akoo revealed that the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) has been changing the terms of its grant applications under pressure from anti-gambling academics and campaigners.
Thanks to the mandatory gambling industry level, the UKRI has £10 million to distribute to anyone who wants to research "gambling and gambling-related harm". It's a huge amount of money for a niche academic area and "public health" researchers are fighting like rats in a sack to get hold of it. This is why people who have never written about gambling before have suddenly taken an interest in the topic. A slew of articles about why gambling should be treated as a "public health" issue have appeared in medical journals in the last couple of years, all of which have been characterised by ignorance about problem gambling as a psychological disorder and robotic incantations about treating it like tobacco (this is a particularly comic example).
Applications must be consortia based and must bring together diverse people, institutions, expertise, experiences, places, and wider stakeholders. This includes people with lived and learned experience from gambling and gambling related harms.
By lived experience, we mean people with direct experience of gambling related harms. Partnerships with non-HEI [higher education institution] organisations and people across the third sector, community groups, industry, and the public sector are essential.
I have now seen some of these letters (released under FOI). What they reveal above all is a sense of entitlement. The activists and academics simply assume that the only way to look at gambling is as a tobacco-adjacent commercial determinant of health and that the only suitable framework is the relatively novel, untested and ill-defined "public health" approach to "gambling harm".
These groups are essentially trying to bully the UKRI into excluding anyone who disagrees with them by pretending that the "public health approach" is the only game in town and that treating gambling disorder as a problem for individuals is socially unacceptable.
Gambling With Lives wrote a similar letter and I daresay several other people did too. This is the "swarm effect". If they repeat something often enough, they think it will become an established fact.
Partnerships with non-HEI organisations and people across the third sector, community groups, the public sector, and industry are essential and can contribute to diverse, innovative and cutting edge research, particularly in respect of the provision of industry data and commercial insights for the furtherance of research endeavours. By ‘industry’ we mean any enterprise that places goods or services on a market and whose commercial activities constitute more than 20% of its annual operations. This definition applies across all sectors and is not limited to organisations within the gambling industry. However, we absolutely recognise the sensitivities in respect of partnerships or collaboration with businesses, the gambling industry or otherwise.
That is why we are clear that any engagement with industry partners, especially those from the gambling sector, must be demonstrably independent, evidence-based, research-led, and aligned with the programme’s public interest objectives to further understanding of gambling and gambling-related harm.
Further, all proposals will be subject to robust scrutiny through our peer review and governance processes, with particular attention paid to the independence and integrity of the research, the source and independence of the findings, and the potential for real-world impact in understanding gambling behaviour and reducing gambling harms.
UKRI wishes to clarify that, as well as not being permitted to host awards, under the Research Programme on Gambling UKRI does not permit funding to be provided to Gambling Commission licence holders who are subject to the levy. We have also placed restrictions on co-funding from such organisations. Furthermore, UKRI would not expect individual researchers to concurrently hold funding from licence holders subject to the levy while receiving funding from the Research Programme on Gambling.
UKRI does not permit engagement with industries whose core business can be associated with harm to public health or societal wellbeing, in line with our ethical standards and harms-based exclusion principles.
Exceptions may be made for time-limited, purpose-specific interactions deemed essential to achieving legitimate and high-quality research objectives (for example, access to proprietary datasets or materials), provided that:
... Partnerships can take different forms including project partners or collaborating organisations. You must demonstrate how the partnerships within your consortium are equitable, have contributed to the development of your application including its conceptualisation, are not compromised by non-compliance with our conflict of interest policy, and will help the centre achieve its aims.
- there is no direct funding or co-authorship from the excluded entity
- the interaction is subject to robust ethical review and declared transparently
- appropriate safeguards are in place to prevent undue influence, reputational risk, or conflicts of interest
- the public benefit of the research demonstrably outweighs the risks of engagement
Saturday, 18 October 2025
Good COP 11
The WHO's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control Conference of the Parties (FCTC COP) will be held in Geneva next month. The media will be banned as usual so I'll be there for the Good COP conference down the road to offer a more enlightened view along with a stellar line up of experts. You can attend or watch online. Details here.
Friday, 17 October 2025
Banning cigarette filters?
Smokers would have to greatly overestimate the benefits of filters for a ban to provide a net benefit in public health terms, and I doubt they do. I expect most of them think they provide no protection at all. Most smokers have only ever known filtered cigarettes and they know that they are highly dangerous. In any case, making a product more dangerous in order to scare people off using it has got to be ethically questionable.
The anti-smoking lobby’s approach to this issue is all over the place. They were all in favour of the development of low tar cigarettes in the 1970s. They now say that was a mistake. Fair enough, but if it was a mistake why did they lobby for the EU to set limits on tar yields in the 1990s and then fight to lower those limits in the 2000s? They then successfully lobbied the EU to ban tobacco companies from putting the tar and nicotine content on packs because this information was (supposedly) misleading. Which is it? Either all cigarettes are as bad as each other, in which case get rid of the limits on tar and nicotine, or low tar cigarettes are safer than high tar cigarettes, in which case consumers should be informed.
Their current position seems to be that all cigarettes are as bad as each other and that filters should be banned because they give the opposite impression. If so, the EU’s limits on tar and nicotine serve no purpose and should be abolished. Indeed, they will have to be abolished if filters are banned because there is no such thing as a low-tar unfiltered cigarette. This is an issue that the authors of the Addiction article, who include ASH’s Hazel Cheeseman, never address. They can’t be dumb enough to think that the EU will accidentally ban cigarettes by banning filters and leaving the tar limits in place so they must think - if they have thought about it at all - that the EU will allow high tar cigarettes to be sold again. That would be fine with me. It’s just be a bit surprising that it’s also fine with an anti-smoking group.
Tuesday, 14 October 2025
Prohibitionists for human rights!
Tobacco control advocacy is not without risks. Increasingly, advocates have spoken out about the threats, harassment and attacks they face when confronting powerful corporate interests.
This commentary argues that tobacco control advocates should be recognised as human rights defenders (HRDs) under international frameworks.
The Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR) defines HRDs as individuals who, individually or with others, act to promote or protect human rights in a peaceful manner.
This definition is based on actions, not positions or titles. By this standard, tobacco control advocates—who work to protect and advance the right to health (and other rights) and challenge harmful corporate practices—clearly fall within the scope of HRDs.
... much of the practical, frontline support for HRDs comes from civil society. For example, a civil society-led initiative based in Europe offers a variety of support mechanisms, including a hotline for urgent protection and visits in detention.
Tobacco control has always been about defending the right to health, life, and dignity.
Yet the advocates who lead this work often face threats without the recognition or protection afforded to other defenders of human rights.
- Organizations promoting "reduced-harm" products while opposing evidence-based measures aligned with the WHO FCTC
- Entities that consistently advance tobacco industry policy positions
The website tells the story of a French anti-smoking campaigner who was "allegedly insulted online" by somebody from an organisation called 'Angry Tobacconists'. It tells the tale of ASH Scotland's Sheila Duffy being called a "health Nazi" by FOREST and of a former Detective Chief Inspector threatening to take her to court over something (the details are not clear). And we hear about some anti-smoking activist in southeast Asia who received a 36 page letter of complaint from somebody who is apparently vaguely connected to the tobacco industry.
Recognising tobacco control advocates as HRDs is not symbolic—it is a necessary step to close a serious protection gap. It would align the field more explicitly with global justice efforts, unlock underused legal and institutional resources...
... and send a clear message that defending health is defending human rights. As pressure from commercial actors intensifies, the global tobacco control community must act—not only to advance policy, but to safeguard those advancing it.
Tobacco control advocates are not defending human rights, but rather promoting controls and limitations on the rights of others. The threats to the safety of tobacco control activists are minimal in practice, but the threats to millions of others from adopting a prohibitionist, war-on-drugs posture towards safer forms of nicotine are significant.
Monday, 13 October 2025
Towards prohibition
I was spoke to Brent Stafford at Regulator Watch when I was at the Global Nicotine Forum in June. We discussed vaping, prohibition and why things will get worse before they get better. Here's the video.
Thursday, 9 October 2025
Has the ultra-processed food panic peaked?
Remember Joe Wicks, the chirpy gym bunny whose YouTube channel got children exercising during lockdown? He was quite famous in the spring of 2020 but was rather less famous five years later. In 2021, at the peak of its success, Joe Wicks Ltd. had £2,181,299 in the bank. By 2024, it had just £78,758.
Whether the fading fame and fortune of Mr Wicks had anything to do with his decision to get onboard the bandwagon against ultra-processed food (UPF), we may never know, but it has certainly got him back on prime time TV. He has been on the breakfast sofa with Ed Balls and Susanna Reid, and viewers were treated to a whole hour of him on Channel 4 this week (Joe Wicks: Licensed to Kill). His promotional device is the “Killer” protein bar which he has created and is portraying as “the most dangerous health bar” ever. It supposedly causes cancer, stroke and heart disease — and yet it is legal! Why won’t the government do something?!
Inevitably, the documentary involves Wicks going on a poorly scripted “journey” to discover the truth about what is really going on in our food environment, blah, blah, blah. Equally inevitably, his tutelage leans heavily on the opinions of Chris van Tulleken who has recently been made a professor and is beginning to look as crazy as he sounds. For cinematic reasons, van Tulleken is portrayed as living in a dimly lit, underground laboratory surrounded by bottles of dangerous chemicals. The vibe is that of a strange but brilliant scientist who has accidentally unleashed the zombie apocalypse and is humanity’s only hope of ending it. Once Wicks gets to work manufacturing his unhealthy snack, van Tulleken occasionally surfaces with an intense stare, urging his youngish protégé to see it through to the end.
Read the rest at The Critic.











