Reason Alleges Calif. Health Manipulated Anti-Tobacco Agenda

A report published by Reason alleges that the California Department of Public Health worked closely with anti-tobacco advocacy groups and consultants to advance policies aimed at ending commercial tobacco sales in the state, raising questions about the boundary between public health education and political advocacy. The article centers on a 2025 study published in Tobacco Control that concluded local tobacco sales bans could be a viable tobacco-control strategy, despite being based on a limited sample of retailers in the affluent California communities of Beverly Hills and Manhattan Beach.

Drawing on emails obtained through public records requests, Reason alleges that CDPH-funded contractors and agency employees collaborated on messaging campaigns supporting tobacco prohibition policies, shared confidential polling data with advocacy partners, helped design voter opinion surveys, and celebrated the adoption of local tobacco sales bans. The report highlights the state’s funding of “Endgame” initiatives intended to eliminate commercial tobacco sales and scrutinizes relationships between CDPH staff, consultants, academic researchers, and organizations such as the American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network. The article argues that these activities amount to taxpayer-funded advocacy for tobacco prohibition rather than neutral public health education, while also questioning the effectiveness of tobacco sales bans and citing concerns about illicit trade and lost tax revenue associated with restrictive tobacco policies. The allegations reflect Reason‘s broader criticism of California’s tobacco-control strategy and its pursuit of a long-term “tobacco endgame” agenda.