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  • - [Narrator] If you've taken a menthol cough drop,

  • you probably noticed a minty flavor

  • and a cool numbing sensation in the back of your throat.

  • That feeling is similar to the one you get

  • from smoking these, menthol cigarettes,

  • and it's part of why the Biden administration

  • is trying to prevent them from being sold.

  • - Health officials say

  • that menthol cigarettes are more appealing to young people

  • because the menthol eases the throat irritation

  • that you experience when you first try a cigarette.

  • - [Narrator] Aside from regular tobacco,

  • menthols are currently the only flavor of cigarette allowed

  • on the market.

  • And they're popular.

  • 43% of smokers in the US used menthols in 2020.

  • Here's why the FDA wants to ban them

  • from being sold and distributed in the US,

  • and why the move is being opposed

  • by some Black community leaders.

  • Menthol, a compound that occurs naturally in mint plants

  • triggers the same receptors we use

  • to sense cold,

  • which creates that numb, chilling sensation.

  • Menthol brands like Newport,

  • the most popular menthol in the US,

  • emphasized the flavor in their older marketing.

  • Smoother Newport

  • Fresher Newport

  • Smoother, more refreshing cigarette

  • - [Narrator] But the FDA says that in addition

  • to reducing the harshness of smoking,

  • menthol also makes it harder to quit.

  • - Menthol interacts with nicotine

  • in the brain to enhance nicotine's addictive effect,

  • according to the FDA,

  • making menthol cigarettes even more additive

  • than regular cigarettes.

  • So they start kids younger

  • and then they keep them hooked for a lifetime,

  • US officials say.

  • - [Narrator] The biggest US tobacco companies

  • have rejected the FDA's findings.

  • - They say that menthol cigarettes

  • don't have any different health effect

  • than a regular cigarette.

  • - [Narrator] Despite this, the FDA got White House support

  • to move forward on the ban last year

  • as part of the Biden administration's

  • Cancer Moonshot initiative,

  • which aims to reduce the cancer death rate

  • by at least 50% over the next 25 years.

  • - The rules announced today would enforce regulations

  • related to what stores sell

  • and what companies manufacture and distribute.

  • - [Narrator] A recent study projected

  • that a ban on menthol cigarettes

  • would prompt an estimated 1.3 million US smokers to quit.

  • The FDA says that menthol smoking

  • disproportionately impacts youth and young adults.

  • In 2019, researchers estimated

  • that more than one million US middle

  • and high school students had smoked a cigarette

  • in the last month.

  • Of those, about 47% reported smoking a menthol.

  • The flavor is also popular among Black smokers.

  • - For decades, cigarette companies

  • have marketed menthol brands

  • like Newport, Kool and Salem to Black people,

  • distributing free packs in Black neighborhoods

  • and running magazine and billboard ads,

  • depicting carefree Black smokers.

  • - [Narrator] Black smokers are more likely to use menthols.

  • They also die at higher rates

  • of smoking-related cancers than other groups,

  • according to the CDC.

  • And US health officials say the ban

  • would help address those disparities.

  • The NAACP has been in support of the ban,

  • saying that "the targeting and marketing

  • of menthol flavoring

  • by the tobacco industry

  • have had a devastating impact on our community."

  • But others think the ban could present problems.

  • Reynolds American, which makes Newport,

  • has given money to prominent Black community leaders

  • who have opposed the ban,

  • like Reverend Al Sharpton

  • and Civil Rights attorney Ben Crump.

  • Crump says he's accepted money

  • from Reynolds for things like scholarships

  • for Black youth

  • but the money has not influenced his opinion.

  • Sharpton did not reply to requests for comment.

  • They, and groups like the ACLU

  • and members of the Congressional Black Caucus

  • have expressed concerns that the ban

  • will disproportionately impact people of color.

  • - They have argued that menthol bans

  • would lead to racial profiling

  • by police and expand the illicit market for cigarettes.

  • - [Narrator] In a statement to The Wall Street Journal,

  • Reynolds said, "It's important to note

  • that we do not make contributions conditional

  • upon organizations maintaining a particular position."

  • The Biden administration has said

  • that enforcement of a ban

  • would target manufacturers and sellers.

  • - This is not about going

  • after individuals smoking menthol cigarettes.

  • This is about manufacturers

  • and people who are selling them.

  • - [Narrator] Tobacco companies

  • could lose significant profits if the ban is enforced.

  • - They already have been grappling

  • with declining smoking rates in the US

  • and they are racing to develop

  • and market alternative products,

  • like e-cigarettes, nicotine pouches,

  • lozenges, and other alternatives

  • in the hopes that smokers will switch over to those.

  • - [Narrator] Even as smoking declines,

  • menthols remain a huge part of the cigarette market.

  • They account for about 1/3 of all cigarettes sold in the US.

  • British American Tobacco, which makes Reynolds American,

  • and Altria, which makes Marlboro

  • are the top menthol makers in the US.

  • Menthol makes up roughly 30%

  • of British American Tobacco's global profits.

  • Altria said in a statement

  • that it believes harm reduction, not prohibition,

  • is the better path forward.

  • Reynolds and Altria have hinted that they may sue

  • if the ban goes into effect.

  • - Litigation could tie this up for years.

  • So even if the FDA moved forward

  • and set an effective date of let's say 2024,

  • once that ban were implemented,

  • then the cigarette companies would likely sue

  • and hold it up further.

  • - [Narrator] The FDA will hear public comments

  • on its proposed rules

  • and will take time to review before finalizing the ban.

- [Narrator] If you've taken a menthol cough drop,

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