A new rule banning the sale of tobacco products on House of Representatives grounds has got Capitol Hill smokers — we hate to say it — smoking mad.Freedom of choice isn't for everyone.
“The health nannies’ arbitrary ban on a legal and heavily taxed product bodes ill for the future marketing of Mountain Dew and MoonPies,” said Rep. Thaddeus G. McCotter, an infuriated Republican, and smoker, from Michigan.
“This is silly ‘feel good’ crap by a bunch of do-gooders,” barked a high-level Democratic staffer (also a smoker). “We should be worried about the housing crisis, the unemployment rate and the national debt instead of making staffers walk four blocks to buy a pack of smokes.”
We should have seen this coming.
The transition to a smoke-free Congress can be traced to November 2006, when voters — stoked by a growing dissatisfaction with the war in Iraq and the state of the nation as a whole — ousted the Republican majority in both houses.
The congressional elections replaced the likes of then-Majority Leader John A. Boehner of Ohio — who lit up his beloved Barclays several times an hour, it seemed — with the more health-conscious Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), who quickly banned smoking on Capitol Hill.
Saddened but undeterred, Minority Leader Boehner demonstrated his opposition to the Democratic agenda by smoking in his office even after the ban went into effect. (Rumor has it that when Boehner vacated his office for incoming Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the room had to be specially fumigated.)
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
House Rules: No Smoking
The Politico reports on the Nanny State: