The Creation of Industry Front Groups: The Tobacco Industry and “Get Government Off Our Back”
- 1 March 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 97 (3) , 419-427
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2005.081117
Abstract
We investigated how industries use front groups to combat public health measures by analyzing tobacco industry documents, contemporaneous media reports, journal articles, and press releases regarding "Get Government Off Our Back," a coalition created by the tobacco industry. RJ Reynolds created Get Government Off Our Back in 1994 to fight federal regulation of tobacco. By keeping its involvement secret, RJ Reynolds was able to draw public and legislative support and to avoid the tobacco industry reputation for misrepresenting evidence. The tobacco industry is not unique in its creation of such groups. Research on organizational background and funding could identify other industry front groups. Those who seek to establish measures to protect public health should be prepared to counter the argument that government should not regulate private behavior.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Who Gave Soft Money? The Effect of Interest Group Resources on Political ContributionsThe Journal of Politics, 2004
- Astroturf: Interest Group Lobbying and Corporate StrategyJournal of Economics & Management Strategy, 2004
- Implications of the Tobacco Industry Documents for Public Health and PolicyAnnual Review of Public Health, 2003
- Tobacco Institute lobbying at the state and local levels of government in the 1990sTobacco Control, 2002
- Science in regulatory policy making: case studies in the development of workplace smoking restrictionsTobacco Control, 2001
- Tobacco lobby political influence on US state legislatures in the 1990sTobacco Control, 2001
- Publication bias and public health policy on environmental tobacco smokePublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1994
- Sponsored symposia on environmental tobacco smokePublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1994
- A Signaling Model of Informative and Manipulative Political ActionAmerican Political Science Review, 1993
- The Value of Biased Information: A Rational Choice Model of Political AdviceThe Journal of Politics, 1985