Cleveland Mayor Justin Bibb recently joined his counterparts from Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, Lansing and St. Louis in calling for a federal ban on the sale of menthol cigarettes. 

“Cleveland is ground zero for this crisis affecting our residents, particularly Black residents,โ€ Bibb said during a teleconference organized by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. โ€œWe need President Biden and the administration to step up to save thousands of lives in our city.โ€ย 

The Biden administration delayed its vote on the federal ban in December after civil rights groups โ€“ some of whom take money from tobacco companies โ€“ warned that a ban would target Black smokers, which could weaken Biden’s re-election bid, according to the Washington Post.ย 

But some national public health advocacy groups argue that Bidenโ€™s inaction is putting politics over health.

The call for a federal ban follows an Ohio Senate vote last week to override Gov. Mike DeWineโ€™s veto of a tobacco ban measure that would stop local governments from enacting tobacco bans stronger than those of the state.

The veto override means local legislation, such as Bibbโ€™s 2023 proposed ban on flavored tobacco, which includes menthol cigarettes, would be illegal. (That proposal from Bibb failed to get Cleveland City Council support.)ย 

Dr. Dave Margolius, Clevelandโ€™s public health director, said he was disappointed by the stateโ€™s decision. 

โ€œWe knew this was coming,โ€ Margolius said. โ€œWe’re not done, and we will pivot how we can. Weโ€™re going to continue to take this fight all the way to the statehouse and the White House.โ€  

Candice covered health and arts and culture for Signal Cleveland until July, 2024. Her health reporting focused on women's health and lead poisoning.