Abstract

BackgroundThe Europe Against Cancer programme was initiated in the late 1980s, recognising, among other risk factors, the problematic relationship between tobacco use and cancer. In an attempt to reduce the number of smokers in the European Community, the European Commission proposed a ban on tobacco advertising. The question of why it took over ten years of negotiating before the EU adopted a policy measure that could in fact improve the health situation in the Community, can only be answered by focusing on politics.MethodsWe used an actor-centred institutionalist approach, focusing on the strategic behaviour of the major actors involved. We concentrated our analysis on the legal basis as an important institution and evaluated how the absence of a proper legal basis for public health measures in the Treaties influenced policy-making, framing the discussion in market-making versus market-correcting policy interventions. For our analysis, we used primary and secondary sources, including policy documents, communications and press releases. We also conducted 9 semi-structured interviews.ResultsThe ban on tobacco advertising was, in essence, a public health measure. The Commission used its agenda-setting power and framed the market-correcting proposal in market-making terms. The European Parliament and the Council of Ministers then used the discussion on the legal basis as a vehicle for real political controversies. After adoption of the ban on tobacco advertising, Germany appealed to the European Court of Justice, which annulled the ban but also offered suggestions for a possible solution with article 100a as the legal basis.ConclusionThe whole market-making versus market-correcting discussion is related to a broader question, namely how far European health regulation can go in respect to the member states. In fact, the policy-making process of a tobacco advertising ban, as described in this paper, is related to the 'constitutional' foundation of health policy legislation in the Community. The absence of a clear-cut legal basis for health policies does not imply that the EU's impact on health is negligible. In the case of tobacco-control measures, the creative use of other Treaty bases has resulted in significant European action in the field of public health.

Highlights

  • The Europe Against Cancer programme was initiated in the late 1980s, recognising, among other risk factors, the problematic relationship between tobacco use and cancer

  • The legal basis: political interpretation Within European Union (EU) policy-making, an important institution is that policy interventions must have a correct legal basis

  • Was this the case? we will show that the Commission's strategic choice for article 100a as the proposal's legal basis generated much political controversy in the Council and the European Parliament (EP)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Europe Against Cancer programme was initiated in the late 1980s, recognising, among other risk factors, the problematic relationship between tobacco use and cancer. In an attempt to reduce the number of smokers in the European Community, the European Commission proposed a ban on tobacco advertising. Since the launch of the Europe against Cancer (EAC) programme in 1987, diverse tobacco control measures have been introduced: a ban on tobacco advertising on television (89/552/EEC), tobacco labelling (89/622/EEC and 92/41/EEC), tar maximums for cigarettes (90/239/EEC) and minimum tax levels for tobacco products (92/12/ EEC, 92/79/EEC and 95/59/EEC) [1]. In 2000, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) annulled the directive after an appeal made by Germany and a few other opponents. Following this ruling, the Commission came up with a new proposal in 2001 that was approved by the EP and the Council in 2003. Despite the restricted scope of the new directive, Germany appealed again

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call