Hey folks, let's give it up for the knuckleheads that railroaded all the liberals into office this past cycle with the straight party vote...........for........drum roll please.........OBAMA!
It's hardly a liberal/conservative issue...the smoking bans in Alberta were passed by a Conservative government, and recent legislation banning flavoured tobacco came in under a federal Conservative government. It's a bipartisan issue, and there is no recourse through the legislature.
Call me ignorant, but honestly is there any chance of undoing the damage politically?
Can things like that/this ever be rescinded? I'm not too edjumukated when it comes to politics.
Because of the entrenched nature of property rights in teh United States, I think there probably is...but I don't know. Honestly, since Canada has a much larger tradition of anti-tobacco sentiment, I think we will actually have an easier time fighting it.
First off, government has embarked on a campaign which not only targets the health aspects of smoking, but it has also denormalized smokers - this is an explicit part of the Canadian tobacco war. This has made smokers immoral. This is an attack on
smokers and not
smoking and because of this, there will be - in the next decade - a legitimate challenge to be made to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, because the government is violating S. 7 (Life, Liberty and Security of the Person). That's not to say there aren't other arguments to be made - violation of freedoms regarding smoking (property + right to do whatever the hell ya want to your body) have been justified under S. 1 of the Charter, which states that government may restrict liberties and rights if there is reasonable grounds to do so. This is determined through the application of the legal test, the Oakes Test. However, smoking bans fail the Oakes test, because they restrict freedoms in light of legitimate, moderate and reasonable alternatives. Ie. Restricting smoking to smoking bars would be a legitimate alternative, which would cause general smoking ban policy to fail the Oakes test in Canada.
Of course, if the mind of the general public was somehow turned away from it's anti-smoking behavior then certainly smoking bans and perhaps even taxes on tobacco could be reversed.
I frequently get most of my Canadian news from CBC, which has an open discussion forum on each news topic that they report. When a topic about tobacco control, the overwhelming majority of people that comment on it are in favour of reducing tobacco controls. Again and difference between the US and Canada...we've been pushed so far that the government only needs to push a little harder before public opinion swings against them. The US is lagging probably 10-15 years behind us...so it'll be interesting.
Even when full smoking bans were instituted, over 50% of people were opposed to such excessive policy...so we shall see.