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. โWe need President Biden and the administration to step up to save thousands of lives in our city.โย
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 Bidenโs inaction is putting politics over health.
The call for a federal ban follows an Ohio Senate vote last week to override Gov. Mike DeWineโs 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 Bibbโs 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, Clevelandโs public health director, said he was disappointed by the stateโs decision.
โWe knew this was coming,โ Margolius said. โWe’re not done, and we will pivot how we can. Weโre going to continue to take this fight all the way to the statehouse and the White House.โ


