ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: TUESDAY, December 13, 1994                   TAG: 9412130054
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: A1   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: WARREN FISKE STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: WASHINGTON                                 LENGTH: Long


TOBACCO'S FRIEND IN WASHINGTON

THIS RICHMOND CONGRESSMAN is known for providing top-notch constituent service. That helps explain why he is such a vigorous defender of the tobacco industry. But anti-smoking advocates say he goes too far.

In the foyer of U.S. Rep. Thomas J. Bliley's congressional suite is a framed display of the various cigarette brands manufactured by Philip Morris U.S.A., the largest private employer in his hometown of Richmond. One wall of his personal office is covered by a gigantic aerial photo of the company's cigarette manufacturing plant.

The pipe-smoking Bliley in recent years has become known as the tobacco industry's foremost advocate in Congress. He has criticized findings on the health effects of secondhand smoke, opposed efforts to place federal regulations on public smoking and fought attempts to increase cigarette taxes to finance health care reform.

And when Congress reconvenes in January to swear in its newly elected Republican majorities, no other politician in the country will have more sway over regulating cigarettes than Bliley. The 62-year-old Republican, derided by critics as "the congressman from Philip Morris," is scheduled to become chairman of the House Commerce Committee, which oversees all federal legislation regarding tobacco.

Enraged anti-cigarette groups say Bliley's chairmanship may mean an end to recent increases in public-smoking restrictions and could threaten federal efforts to classify nicotine as an addictive drug. Noting that Bliley has received $98,000 in contributions from the tobacco industry since 1987 - more than any other member of Congress during that time - many are calling for him to resign the chairmanship he has yet to assume.

"Obviously, we're not pleased," said John F. Banzhaf, founder of Action on Smoking and Health in Washington. "Bliley's nothing more than a water boy for the tobacco industry. He has a direct conflict of interest with what should be one of the major thrusts of his committee - to protect the health of Americans."

Joining the disgruntled chorus is Garry Trudeau, author of the comic strip "Doonesbury." In cartoons last week, Trudeau lampooned Bliley by protraying a tobacco industry lobbyist sipping champagne at a congressional hearing and discovering the chairman is "squarely in my pocket."

Bliley said during a recent interview that anti-smoking forces have become overzealous. He suggested that the Democrat formerly in charge of a subcommittee overseeing smoking matters - Rep. Henry Waxman of California - had a vendetta against the tobacco industry. And he said that the panel's days of summoning tobacco executives for highly charged hearings before television cameras are over.

"Yes, I've been portrayed as a point man [for the tobacco industry]," Bliley said. "But that's because these hearings were going on and I felt the witnesses before the committee should be treated with respect."

A lanky man with sharp features, silver hair and an ever-present bow tie, Bliley looks like the stereotypical mortician - which he once was. He's a quiet, formal type who works effectively behind the scenes and over the years has built a strong friendship with soon-to-be House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgia. Gingrich backed Bliley for the chairmanship even though another Republican on the committee - Rep. Carlos J. Moorhead of California - had more seniority.

Although dependably conservative, friends say it is wrong to categorize Bliley as an ideologue. "He's a very fair, but very tough," said Democrat Eleanor Holmes Norton, the District of Columbia's non-voting delegate to the House who has worked closely with Bliley. "When he gives you his word, you can absolutely depend on it."

Bliley, a former Richmond mayor, was elected to Congress in 1980 and has never had a problem retaining his seat. He is known for providing top-notch constituent services, which friends say partially explains his strong defense of tobacco interests.

The other part of the explanation, they say, is that Bliley is staunchly laissez faire when it comes to business. Unlike tobacco executives, Bliley acknowledges that cigarette smoking is a health risk and that nicotine is addictive, said Charles Boesel, spokesman for the congressman. But Bliley also argues that adults, once made aware of those facts, should be free to decide for themselves whether to smoke, Boesel added.

But critics say Bliley's defense of the tobacco industry has been excessive. In 1991, for example, Bliley summoned seven scientists from the Environmental Protection Agency to his office for individual grillings before a report was released linking secondhand smoke to cancer and heart disease.

Banzhaf, who accompanied one of the scientists, accused Bliley of trying to thwart publication of the report. Bliley said he was merely trying ensure that the EPA followed proper scientific procedures. He accused the agency of conducting a biased study.

Bliley said he regards tobacco no differently than any other business concern. "I'm a friend of business and industry," he said. "I mean, we all have to work for a living ... and if business doesn't do well, people lose jobs, and the economy suffers."

Bliley promised to be fair to anti-smoking interests and said he would not block the committee from considering tobacco restrictions. He added, however, that the 46-member panel might be too busy this year to spend much time on smoking.

The first order of business, he said, will be for the panel to act on bills related to the "Contract with America" - the 10-point Republican agenda calling for a series of fiscal reforms and changes to congressional rules. The Commerce Committee will consider several key elements of the contract: job creation, product liability reforms and welfare reforms.

Later in the year, Bliley said, he will focus on cable television regulations and on passing a clean water act.

Tobacco, however, may become too hot an issue for Bliley to ignore. Federal agencies are considering new regulations that could deeply restrict smoking. The Food and Drug Administration is studying whether nicotine should be classified as an addictive drug - an action that would bring the manufacture of cigarettes under strict government control. And the Occupational Safety and Health Administration is considering banning smoking in all workplaces.

Anti-smoking advocates, dismayed by Bliley's chairmanship, take solace in these developments. "Progress won't stop," said Edmund M. Mierzwinski, director of the U.S. Public Interest Research Group in Washington. "But instead of looking to Congress to restrict smoking, people will start looking to federal agencies and state governments."



 by CNB