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Guest Post: "For generations, the tobacco industry has deliberately hooked children on nicotine before they are old enough to fully understand the consequences"

6 replies

RhiannonEMumsnet · Today 14:24

Sharon Hodgson MP

Sharon Hodgson is the Labour MP for Washington and Gateshead South and Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State in the Department for Health and Social Care.

Think for a moment about your child’s future. Not next week or next year, but the decades stretching ahead of them. The life they have yet to live. Now imagine those years shaped by a harmful addiction they never truly chose, costing them money and health, and ultimately cutting their life short through entirely preventable illness. That is the reality facing too many young people today, and it is one the government is determined to change.

Smoking remains the leading cause of preventable death in the UK, claiming around 80,000 lives every year. Up to two‑thirds of deaths in smokers are caused by smoking itself and most smokers wish they had never started, with over half saying they want to quit. Yet for generations, the tobacco industry has deliberately hooked children on nicotine before they are old enough to fully understand the consequences. In England alone, 11 per cent of 11 to 15 year‑olds have already tried smoking.

Now add vaping into the picture.

Smoking is a known enemy, but vaping is an emerging one. Vapes are less harmful than tobacco and can help adult smokers quit, and that role must be protected. But in recent years we have seen something far more troubling: vapes marketed to children, sold cheaply, packaged brightly and flavoured like sweets, placed on counters purposely right next to the sweets in corner shops. It's no wonder youth vaping has more than doubled in England between 2018 and 2023. While the long‑term effects are still unclear, we know nicotine is highly addictive, particularly for children and young people.

The Tobacco and Vapes Bill is the government’s response. At its heart is a simple but historic commitment: anyone born on or after 1 January 2009 will never legally be sold tobacco. Over time, this will break the cycle of addiction for good.

As part of the Bill, single‑use vapes, which are most popular among young people, are already banned. From October this year, a new tax on vaping products will follow, with a clear aim: to reduce uptake among non‑smokers, especially children and teenagers.

The Bill also tackles how vapes are marketed. It will end vape advertising and sponsorship, and gives powers to restrict flavours, packaging and where products are displayed. Retailers who sell to under‑18s will face on‑the‑spot fines, and a new licensing scheme will ensure only responsible retailers can sell tobacco, vapes and nicotine products.

As parents, we want our children to be healthy, happy and free. This legislation ensures the next generation never faces the misery of tobacco addiction, never spends thousands on cigarettes they wish they had never started, and never looks back and asks why nobody acted sooner.

OP posts:
Arregaithel · Today 14:38

@RhiannonEMumsnet

Does the bill explain how the government are proposing to generate the tax that fills the treasury coffers, from tobacco?

eta; you blame the tobacco companies, rightly so but the government is complicit because they need the revenue

Glitterbiscuits · Today 14:41

Just ban vapes.
They are disgusting and only serve to make people addicted to something that didn’t exist before.
All types of smoking is utterly vile.

smallchange · Today 14:56

WHO COULD HAVE POSSIBLY PREDICTED... that children would be attracted to a product which came in all sorts of sweet flavours?

And now snus is back.

Legislation needs to stay ahead of industry, not play catch up when the product is already embedded in the high street and children are already hooked.

Vaping should have been a prescription only smoking cessation aid, issued as part of a smoking cessation programme. Flavoured vape liquids should be banned.

Arregaithel · Today 15:19

@smallchange

"Flavoured vape liquids should be banned" as should tobacco, do you think?

Arregaithel · Today 15:42

I may have misunderstood the "guest post" format @RhiannonEMumsnet, is Sharon Hodgson expecting support or is she looking for fine-tuning/revision of her position?

Alternatively, do our opinions have zero influence and she's just trying to garner support for her somewhat, flawed stance?

smallchange · Today 15:50

Arregaithel · Today 15:19

@smallchange

"Flavoured vape liquids should be banned" as should tobacco, do you think?

If I had my way, yes. All types of tobacco and nicotine products. They've killed approximately half of my family members that used them for the last 3 generations.

However, prohibition tends not to work as expected, and the addicted are a poor group to respond to prohibition so stopping people from starting (ie targeting children) is a much more effective strategy.

It staggers me that legislators stood by and let flavoured vapes come on to the market when they are clearly an extremely attractive product for the young, a gateway to nicotine addiction and have zero upside for anyone. Wholesale banning of these products would be easier than a total tobacco ban.

I'm broadly in favour of the born after... ban, but hope the government have closely examined what happened in New Zealand where it was fairly rapidly overturned when a new party gained power.

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