[Congressional Bills 116th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 896 Introduced in House (IH)]
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116th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 896
Reaffirming support of fundamental United States principles at the
United Nations and encouraging the World Health Organization to embrace
technological advancements in tobacco control.
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IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
March 11, 2020
Mr. Reschenthaler submitted the following resolution; which was
referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs
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RESOLUTION
Reaffirming support of fundamental United States principles at the
United Nations and encouraging the World Health Organization to embrace
technological advancements in tobacco control.
Whereas the United Nations was established in part as a global forum to convene
disparate parties, resolve disputes, and establish policy
recommendations in a fair, equitable, and transparent manner;
Whereas the World Health Organization, an affiliated organization of the United
Nations, develops policy recommendations that severely restrict, or de
facto prohibit, interaction with legal private enterprise and thereby
provides no recourse or opportunity for input to those impacted
entities;
Whereas, in 2016, the World Health Organization adopted the Framework of
Engagement with Non-State Actors, commonly known as FENSA, which, by
design, effectively discourages interaction with the private sector;
Whereas the World Health Organization is actively targeting major American
industries, including agriculture, food and beverage, and pharmacology,
with onerous global regulations, and the World Health Organization's
policies targeting the tobacco sector outright prohibit communication,
engagement, or opportunity for partnership;
Whereas the World Health Organization is actively pressuring the entire United
Nations system, including the United Nations Secretary-General,
International Labor Organization, Food and Agriculture Organization,
Economic and Social Council, World Bank, and International Monetary
Fund, among others, to adopt similar policies with respect to the
tobacco sector;
Whereas the People's Republic of China owns China National Tobacco Corporation,
the largest tobacco company in the world, and this does not disqualify
the People's Republic of China from engaging in dialogue with and
receiving funds from the World Health Organization;
Whereas the World Health Organization's tobacco policy recommendations fail to
acknowledge that available science, technology, and innovation can
accelerate the decline of cigarette smoking worldwide and reduce
smoking-related death and disease;
Whereas although the best health outcome for current smokers is to quit nicotine
altogether, the reality is that less than 10 percent of adult smokers
will successfully quit cigarettes in a given year;
Whereas the Food and Drug Administration's tobacco control policy recognizes
this reality and provides global health regulators a pathway forward to
move adult smokers down the continuum of risk;
Whereas pursuant to the bipartisan Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control
Act, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) follows an inclusive,
transparent regulatory framework that promotes innovation in tobacco
products based on a rigorous scientific evaluation, including minimizing
unintended use of such products by nonsmokers, former smokers, and
youth, where only those products determined to be ``appropriate for the
protection of public health'' receive FDA authorization;
Whereas the FDA regularly engages the private sector in an open and transparent
manner regarding the development of such innovative products;
Whereas the World Health Organization continues to cite an irreconcilable and
inherent conflict to prohibit any engagement with or input from the
tobacco sector and does not acknowledge the Food and Drug
Administration's review and regulation of science, technology, and
innovation that can potentially reduce the harms associated with
cigarette smoking; and
Whereas policies based on the exclusion of any industry for which they seek to
regulate do not advance sound health policy, and are antithetical to
fundamental United States values of equal protection, free speech, due
process, and the right to petition: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives directs the Department
of State and the Department of Health and Human Services to encourage
the United Nations and the World Health Organization, respectively, to
adopt policies that recognize the rights of disparate parties and
scientific determinations of the Food and Drug Administration to
advance technology and innovation that can reduce the burden of death
and disease caused from cigarette smoking.
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