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U.K. lawmakers back anti-smoking bill, moving step closer to a future ban on all tobacco sales

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London — U.K. lawmakers have voted decisively in favor of legislation aimed at eventually banning smoking in Britain. The controversial Tobacco and Vapes Bill is now one step closer to becoming law after clearing its first hurdle in parliament.

The bill would make it illegal to sell tobacco to anyone born after January 1, 2009, with the legal age for the purchase of tobacco products increasing by one year every year until it eventually covers the entire population.

Backers of the legislation, including Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who has made it a key policy of his government, say the aim is to create the U.K.’s “first smoke-free generation.” 

If enacted, it would be one of the toughest national anti-smoking measures in the world.

Under current law, it is illegal for anyone under the age of 18 to buy tobacco products in the U.K., but under the Tobacco and Vapes Bill, children who are turning 15 this year, or anyone younger, would never be able to legally buy tobacco in Britain.


White House delays decision on menthol cigarette ban

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The proposed legislation would not criminalize smoking, but rather the sale of tobacco depending on a customer’s age, and it would ensure that anyone who’s currently allowed to buy tobacco products will never be prevented from doing so.

But despite praise from some health experts and the broad backing of parliament, the bill has generated controversy — even sparked rebellion — within Sunak’s own Conservative Party.
The legislation was debated Tuesday in the House of Commons, where some more libertarian-minded Members of Parliament argued that it would limit personal freedoms and branded it “unconservative.”

Liz Truss, who served very briefly as U.K. prime minister in 2022, called the proposal a “virtue-signaling piece of legislation about protecting adults from themselves in the future.”
Another former Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, said it was “mad” that the party of Winston Churchill, Britain’s famously cigar-loving World War II leader, was considering “banning cigars.”

Conservative Member of Parliament Simon Clarke told CBS News partner network BBC News that the ban would be counterproductive.

“I think it actually risks making smoking cooler,” he said. “It certainly risks creating a black market, and it also risks creating an unmanageable challenge for the authorities.”

While the number of people who smoke in Britain has been falling for years, the Action on Smoking and Health campaign group says it remains the primary cause of preventable illness and premature death in England, accounting for approximately 74,600 deaths every year.


What teens and parents should know about the dangers of vaping

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The proposed bill would also attempt to reduce the number of young people taking up vaping. It would ban the sale of the inexpensive, disposable vapes often seen in the hands of minors, and restrict the variety of vape flavors available in a bid to reduce uptake by children.

A similar smoking ban was proposed by New Zealand’s former Prime Minister Jacinda Arden, but it was scrapped earlier this year by the country’s new coalition government.



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Pharrell Williams on “Piece by Piece” and his love of joy

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Pharrell Williams on “Piece by Piece” and his love of joy – CBS News


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Pharrell Williams, a self-described misfit who grew up in Virginia Beach, Va., saw and heard the world differently than most people. He has built a fascinating career as a musician, performer, and now creative director for Louis Vuitton Men. He talked with “Sunday Morning” contributor Kelefa Sanneh about the joy he finds in creativity, and about his new movie, “Piece by Piece,” an animated film that depicts Williams and all other characters as Lego pieces.

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Pharrell Williams on “Piece by Piece” and his love of joy

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On a rainy day in Paris, Pharrell Williams was at the headquarters of Louis Vuitton living the dream, at an office he prefers to call “a dream space.”

Last February, Williams was appointed the Men’s Creative Director. He oversees a staff of 200, and has already launched four new collections. His most recent, at UNESCO, paid tribute to the variety of the human race.

Louis Vuitton - Runway - Paris Fashion Week - Menswear Spring/Summer 2025
Pharrell Williams on the runway at the Louis Vuitton fashion show during Milan Fashion Week Menswear Spring/Summer 2025, held at Maison de l’Unesco, June 18, 2024, in Paris.

Giovanni Giannoni/WWD via Getty Images


Asked what is most satisfying watching his designs come down the runway, Williams said, “You’re gonna hate this answer: All of it!” he laughed. “Come on, man. It’s a dream!”

For more than three decades he’s been helping to make some of pop music’s biggest hits, from Nelly’s “Hot in Herre” to Gwen Stefani’s “Hollaback Girl,” while helping to bridge the gap between pop culture and high fashion.

He says the runway is just another way for him to show people who he is: “I always want to evoke a sense of joy, ’cause I feel like the world, there’s a deficit of joy.”

Sanneh asked, “But I imagine you do still have to pay attention to, ‘Are people buying these clothes that I made?'”

“Sure; that’s when you start questioning the success,” Williams said. “But like, man, you gotta enjoy it. If you enjoy it, nine times out of ten, somebody else gonna enjoy it.”

pharrell-williams-at-paris-studio.jpg
Pharrell Williams at the studio he added in the Paris offices of Louis Vuitton. 

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Now there’s something new to enjoy: “Piece by Piece,” an animated Lego movie about Williams’ life, directed by the award-winning documentarian Morgan Neville. Last month, at the Toronto Film Festival, Williams said he still can’t believe he got to make this film. “I’m from a marginalized community where we often hear the word ‘no’ all the time,” he said. “For whatever reason, [for ‘Piece by Piece’], we got a lot of yeses.”

“This seems like one of your superpowers is getting people to say ‘yes’ to things they might otherwise say ‘no’ to,” said Sanneh.

“It wasn’t that hard; it’s just harder for people who look like me,” Williams replied. “But when we tell it in Lego, now it’s universal. Replace Black with LGBTQIA, or Indian, or Asian, or short, or plus size, or anything. LEGO is the great equalizer.”

To watch a trailer for “Piece by Piece,” click on the video player below:


PIECE BY PIECE – Official Trailer [HD] – Only In Theaters October 11 by
Focus Features on
YouTube

As a boy growing up in a Virginia Beach apartment complex, Williams, a self-described misfit, saw and heard the world differently than most people, through a condition called synesthesia, by which he “sees” the colors of sound: “For me, sight and sound are still connected, so they send ghost images to each other. It’s a condition, but also at the same time it’s a gift, because I don’t know how I would make music if I couldn’t see it. That’s the way that I conceptualize it.”

With his childhood friend Chad Hugo, he formed a duo called The Neptunes. They were discovered by the music producer Teddy Riley, who saw them perform at a high school talent show. In 1992, around the time of his 19th birthday, Williams helped Riley write a hit single called “Rump Shaker,” recorded by the hip-hop group Wreckx-N-Effect.

Williams said, “If it wasn’t for Teddy Riley, I wouldn’t be sitting here right now. ‘Cause I was in Virginia Beach, Virginia, where there was no music studio or music industry or anything like that.”

The Neptunes produced a string of hits, and then Williams branched out on his own, becoming a real pop star. His voice was everywhere, although Williams himself had mixed feelings about it: “I had a song called ‘Beautiful’ with Snoop, right? Girls heard me singing that; I heard Mickey Mouse! I swear to you, when you just get a moment and you just listen, you’ll never be able to un-hear it again. But that’s what I hear.”

“Sexy Mickey Mouse?” asked Sanneh.

“No, not sexy, just Mickey Mouse. It was wild for me.”

By the early 2000s, Williams says he felt lost: “I had moved away from being a student, and things became too formulaic. And that was troubling to my spirit, and I could no longer feel what I was doing.”

He rebounded by being a bit more open to new ideas – working with Daft Punk on “Get Lucky,” and Robin Thicke on “Blurred Lines.”

“Get Lucky” by Daft Punk featuring Pharrell Williams and Nile Rodgers:


Daft Punk – Get Lucky (Official Audio) ft. Pharrell Williams, Nile Rodgers by
DaftPunkVEVO on
YouTube

The producers of “Despicable Me 2” asked him to write a song for the soundtrack … something happy. “I would’ve never written a song called ‘Happy,'” he said. “It was commissioned for me to do. And on top of that, I didn’t think I was gonna have any more, like, hit records. The universe was like, ‘Well, not only are you wrong about that, but I’m gonna have three different commissions come from three different places, and these are gonna be the biggest records for you.’ It just humbled me because it was like, I couldn’t be pompous. I couldn’t be arrogant.”

“Happy” by Pharrell Williams:


Pharrell Williams – Happy (Video) by
PharrellWilliamsVEVO on
YouTube

Naturally, Williams, now 51, created the theme song for the new movie “Piece by Piece”:


Piece By Piece (Official Audio) by
PharrellWilliamsVEVO on
YouTube

He’s put a music studio in his office, so he can make songs while simultaneously working on the next Louis Vuitton collection. But he says he never feels as if he’s on the clock.

Asked if the pressure to create takes some of the joy out of it, Williams replied, “It’s not a pressure; it’s a privilege. You can’t go wrong when your aim is to enjoy what you do. You can’t go wrong.”

      
For more info:

       
Story produced by Robbyn McFadden. Editor: Steven Tyler. 



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Election officials on threats to your right to vote

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Election officials on threats to your right to vote – CBS News


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Just weeks before the presidential election, new rules are going into effect that can jeopardize people’s right to vote, from challenges to voter registrations, to limits on when and how ballots may be cast. CBS News chief election & campaign correspondent Robert Costa talks with officials in Georgia, including Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, about conducting a free and fair election under duress while combating false accusations of election fraud.

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