Britain has moved a step closer to enacting some of the toughest anti-smoking measures in the world, which include banning future generations from ever buying cigarettes.
On Tuesday, MPs voted 383 to 67 to approve in principle legislation that will make it an offence to sell tobacco products to anyone born after Jan. 1, 2009. The bill also takes aim at vaping and puts new restrictions on the flavouring and packaging used in vapes, to make them less attractive to children.
The bill still has to clear more parliamentary hurdles but is widely expected to be enacted and take effect in April, 2025. Under its provisions, children turning 15 this year will be the first cohort banned for life from buying tobacco. The government estimates that once the law is in place, smoking will be phased out almost entirely in Britain by 2040.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has been an ardent champion of the policy, which he unveiled last October during a Conservative Party convention. “I want to build a better and brighter future for our children, so that’s why I want to stamp out smoking for good,” Mr. Sunak told party members at the time.
He took inspiration from a similar law introduced by New Zealand’s Labour government in 2022, which stopped those born after January, 2009, from being able to legally buy cigarettes. However, last fall the newly elected coalition government of the National Party and the First Party scrapped the law, which was to take effect in July. Prime Minister Chris Luxon said the ban would have created a black market and deprived the treasury of badly needed tax revenue. He has promised to introduce other measures to curb smoking.
Mr. Sunak’s government has not been dissuaded. On Tuesday, Health and Social Care Secretary Victoria Atkins pushed ahead with the legislation.