The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company's challenge to a voter-approved measure in California that banned flavored tobacco products in the most populous U.S. state.
The justices rejected an appeal by R.J.
Reynolds, a unit of British American Tobacco (BATS.L), opening a new tab, and other plaintiffs of a lower
court's ruling holding that California's law did not conflict with a federal
statute regulating tobacco products.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta,
a Democrat who defended the law in court, in a post on X, formerly known as
Twitter, called the Supreme Court's decision "excellent news."
"We look forward to continuing to
fight to prevent addiction and protect the health of our people," Bonta
said.
R.J. Reynolds declined to comment.
Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom in
2020 signed into law a ban on all flavored tobacco products - including menthol
cigarettes and cotton candy-flavored vaping products - in response to concerns
about a rise in e-cigarette and tobacco use by teenagers.
The ban's implementation was delayed
after a tobacco industry coalition gathered enough signatures to put to voters
a ballot measure that would block California from becoming the largest state to
ban flavored tobacco product sales. But nearly two-thirds of voters casting
ballots on the measure known as Proposition 31 approved the sales ban in
November 2022.
The law made California the second
state to ban all flavored tobacco product sales after Massachusetts in 2019.
Several other states have restricted flavored vaping products and several
municipalities have adopted their own bans.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
in 2020 banned all flavors except tobacco and menthol in Juul and other
cartridge-based e-cigarettes. In 2022, the FDA sought to ban sales of all Juul
e-cigarettes, though it later put the order on hold.
Beyond vaping, the FDA in April
2022 proposed banning
menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars. Those rules have yet to be finalized
and have been the subject of lobbying by tobacco groups.
A day after the California vote, R.J.
Reynolds along with a group representing tobacco retailers, the Neighborhood
Market Association, and a vape shop, filed a lawsuit arguing the federal
Tobacco Control Act, which the FDA enforces, preempts state and local laws that
bar flavored tobacco product sales.
But a federal judge ruled those
arguments were foreclosed by an earlier decision by the San Francisco-based 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upholding a similar ban in Los Angeles County.
The 9th Circuit upheld the judge's
ruling on California's law in June after the U.S. Supreme Court earlier in
2023 declined
to hear an
appeal of the Los Angeles ruling.
R.J. Reynolds had previously
unsuccessfully asked the U.S. Supreme Court to prevent the California law from
taking effect while it pursued its appeals. The justices rejected that
request in December 2022.
Source: Reuters
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