Mississippi is home to one of the more successful anti-smoking programs in the country. Between 1999 and 2004, the program reduced smoking by 48% among public middle school students (from 23% to 12%) and by 32% among public high school students (from 32.5% to 22.1%).
Naturally, Mississippi’s Republican governor, Haley Barbour, who happens to be a former lobbyist for the tobacco industry, has decided to kill the program by eliminating its funding.
“This is truly a case of one man, a longtime tobacco industry lobbyist, using his power to destroy a program that was reducing tobacco use among Mississippi’s kids,” said Matthew Myers, President of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, a national nonprofit organization.
In a report to be issued Wednesday, the group documents what it calls Barbour’s “relentless attack” on what it said was the nation’s most successful anti-smoking program.
Barbour complained that the program received its funding directly from the courts and that it needed legislative approval, according to Myers. When the legislature passed a bill to continue the funding, Barbour vetoed it and went back to the courts to withdraw all remaining monies from the program.
Myers says he believes Barbour’s motive was to protect his longtime clients in the tobacco industry. Barbour served as a lobbyist for tobacco clients from 1998 to 2002. His firm, Barbour, Griffin, & Rogers, was paid a total of $3.8 million by the tobacco companies, according to reports obtained by the United States Senate Office of Public Records.
Barbour said he killed the program because Partnership for a Healthy Mississippi’s budget wasn’t transparent enough. The organization responded by noting that the Partnership’s audits are made public every year.
I don’t have an overarching point here, other than the belief that this seems to be a quintessential example of Republican policymaking circa 2006. Hire a far-right lobbyist, find a successful government program that benefits the public, kill it, and lie about it.