Majority back plans to crack down on smoking
Government plans will make it illegal to sell tobacco to anyone born on or after January 1 2009.
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Your support makes all the difference.The majority of English adults back Government plans to phase out smoking, a new poll suggests.
Proposed legislation for England will make it an offence for anyone born on or after January 1, 2009, to be sold tobacco products.
Two thirds (67%) of adults in England back the plans, according to a poll of 3,500 English adults.
Some 14% said that they oppose the measure, according to the survey, conducted by YouGov on behalf of the charity Action on Smoking and Health (ASH).
The policy was backed by 74% of those who intend to vote Conservative at the next election, 72% of those intending to vote Labour, and 65% of those intending to vote for the Liberal Democrats.
āThis is not a party political issue in the UK, successive governments, backed by strong public and parliamentary support, have passed increasingly stringent tobacco regulations aimed at bringing the smoking epidemic to an end,ā said ASH chief executive Deborah Arnott.
āThe passing of the smokefree generation legislation promised in the Kingās speech, backed by increased investment to help adult smokers quit, can put us in pole position to achieve a smokefree future.ā
Commenting on the poll, Simon Clark, director of the smokersā group Forest, said: āBanning the sale of tobaccoĀ to futureĀ generations of adults wonāt stop young people smoking.Ā
āIt will simply drive them into the arms of illegal traders and criminal gangs.
āIf youāre old enough at 18 to vote, drive a car, join the army, and purchase alcohol, youāre old enough to buy tobacco.ā
The results of the survey were released with a week left on the Government consultation for its proposals.
It comes after Downing Street has said the Prime Ministerās crackdown on cigarettes remains āunchangedā after reports New Zealand will rescind its own anti-smoking laws.
Rishi Sunakās announcement at the Conservative Party conference last month that he would effectively outlaw smoking among younger generations, was seen as having been inspired by former New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardernās government doing something similar.
But reports have suggested that the new coalition government in Wellington will repeal legislation banning tobacco sales to people born after 2008.
The legal age for buying cigarettes and other tobacco products in England and Wales is 18, having been raised from 16 in 2007 by the previous Labour government.
A Government-commissioned report published in June 2022 found that, without urgent action, England would miss its 2030 smoke-free target by at least seven years.
Dr Javed Khan, who conducted the inquiry, put the annual cost to society of smoking at about Ā£17 billion ā Ā£2.4 billion to the NHS alone.