Ohio Governor DeWine's Veto Power over Tobacco Legislation

Jan.06.2023
Ohio Governor DeWine's Veto Power over Tobacco Legislation
Governor DeWine's veto power over tobacco legislation marks victory for Ohio cities' efforts to regulate flavored tobacco and e-cigarettes.

The veto power of Ohio Governor DeWine to prevent cities from strengthening tobacco laws signals a victory for cities such as Columbus who aim to enhance regulation on flavored tobacco and e-cigarette products. In early December 2022, Columbus passed a law prohibiting the sale of menthol cigarettes and e-cigarette products.


Ohio Governor Mike DeWine spoke candidly about his views on the ban on flavored tobacco and even hinted at vetoing the bill. Nearly two decades ago, while serving as a U.S. Senator, DeWine worked with Democratic Senator Ted Kennedy to pass legislation allowing the FDA to prohibit the sale of tobacco products to minors and prevent the sale of new flavored tobacco products.


DeWine also suggested that lawmakers prohibit flavored tobacco products throughout the state.


Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther stated in a release that the city is taking measures to curb youth smoking and vaping, and addressing how the industry targets Black consumers with mint-flavored cigarette products. This veto power is a positive start for the children of Columbus.


Public health advocates are also applauding the governor's decision. They believe that local laws are a means of curbing youth smoking and vaping, as well as addressing the issue of the tobacco industry targeting black consumers with menthol-flavored cigarettes.


Supporters of House Bill 513 argue that there should not be patchwork regulations and that oversight of tobacco products is a statewide issue. Ohio law allows local municipalities to pass their own regulations as long as they do not conflict with statewide laws.


According to the governor and a spokesperson for Republican senators, last session of the congress has adjourned, therefore legislators are unable to overturn DeWine's veto.


Nearly 20 years ago, cities in Ohio began implementing indoor smoking bans, partly in support of a statewide ban. When lawmakers failed to take action, public health organizations utilized citizen-initiated regulatory procedures to ban indoor smoking statewide on the 2006 ballot.


Five years ago, a city consortium passed a local law raising the legal age for tobacco purchase to 21 years and older. In 2019, Ohio also set the purchasing age for tobacco at 21 years and older.


This document has been generated through artificial intelligence translation and is provided solely for the purposes of industry discourse and learning. Please note that the intellectual property rights of the content belong to the original media source or author. Owing to certain limitations in the translation process, there may be discrepancies between the translated text and the original content. We recommend referring to the original source for complete accuracy. In case of any inaccuracies, we invite you to reach out to us with corrections. If you believe any content has infringed upon your rights, please contact us immediately for its removal.

BAT’s Product Strategy Reset: A Structural Analysis of Its Post-FY2025 Competitive Architecture
BAT’s Product Strategy Reset: A Structural Analysis of Its Post-FY2025 Competitive Architecture
Drawing on BAT’s FY2025 results and earnings call, 2Firsts finds the company shifting from category expansion to competitive entrenchment across Vapour, Modern Oral, Heated Products and Combustibles. The strategy centers on connected devices, geographic customization and portfolio tiering. While structurally coherent, financial returns depend on consistent regulatory enforcement against illicit competitors, making policy execution a key variable for 2026 performance.
Feb.12
Russian State Duma Passes Ban on Tobacco and Vape Sales at Public Transport Stops
Russian State Duma Passes Ban on Tobacco and Vape Sales at Public Transport Stops
Russia’s State Duma has approved, in its third reading, a law banning the sale of cigarettes and electronic cigarettes at public transport stops. The measure expands existing restrictions on tobacco sales at transport infrastructure facilities and aims to reduce accessibility, particularly among young people. The law includes an exemption for small settlements where such kiosks are the only sales points and will take effect on September 1, 2026.
Dec.18 by 2FIRSTS.ai
Guam DOE: Police to respond to all school-campus incidents involving minors and nicotine products
Guam DOE: Police to respond to all school-campus incidents involving minors and nicotine products
According to the Guam Department of Education (GDOE), police officers will now assist in handling incidents involving minor students who vape or use tobacco products on public school campuses, and cases may be forwarded to the Office of the Attorney General.
Jan.15 by 2FIRSTS.ai
Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine: counterfeit nicotine mixes and e-cigarette e-liquids seized, valued at over US$276,000
Khmelnytskyi, Ukraine: counterfeit nicotine mixes and e-cigarette e-liquids seized, valued at over US$276,000
According to UNN, law enforcement in Ukraine’s Khmelnytskyi region disrupted a group accused of selling illegally produced nicotine-containing mixtures and e-cigarette e-liquids without licenses or permits. The Prosecutor General’s Office said the overall value of the seized items exceeds UAH 12 million (about US$276,000). Motions were filed to arrest the seized property, and decisions are pending on necessary forensic examinations. (FX used: 1 UAH = US$0.023, as provided by the user.)
Jan.14 by 2FIRSTS.ai
Brazil’s MPF and Anvisa sign pact to intensify enforcement against vapes
Brazil’s MPF and Anvisa sign pact to intensify enforcement against vapes
Brazil’s Federal Public Prosecutor’s Office (MPF) and health regulator Anvisa signed a cooperation protocol to strengthen enforcement against electronic smoking devices (DEFs) and expand health-risk awareness campaigns.
Feb.03 by 2FIRSTS.ai
Mexico’s ENCODAT 2025 finds smoking rate falls as vaping rises
Mexico’s ENCODAT 2025 finds smoking rate falls as vaping rises
Results from Mexico’s ENCODAT 2025 indicate a structural shift in tobacco and nicotine use: past-month combustible tobacco use among the general population (ages 12–65) declined to 15.1%, down from 17.6% in 2016, while past-month e-cigarette use increased to 2.6%, up from 1.1%.
Dec.25 by 2FIRSTS.ai