Evanston Raising Age for Tobacco Purchases

Starting Saturday, reports the Chicago Sun Times, you’ll have to be 21 to buy cigarettes and other tobacco products in north suburban Evanston, Illinois. The Evanston City Council passed an ordinance Oct. 27 raising the minimum age to buy and sell tobacco, which was previously set at 18, the city said in a statement.“This is a major step toward decreasing young adult chronic tobacco use,” said Evonda Thomas-Smith, director of the Evanston Health and Human Services Department.

Big Soda Pours Money into Berkeley Soda Tax Vote

Next week residents of Berkeley, California, will decide whether to place a penny-an-ounce tax on sugary beverages, writes Mother Jones. The beverage industry has fought off similar taxes and restrictions in every American city where they’ve been proposed, but it has never faced a more formidable challenge than it does in this overwhelmingly liberal and well-educated college town. The soda fight is, if nothing else, a case study in whether truckloads of cash can sway a politically engaged citizenry.

Guns Laws Bring Cash Into Campaigns

Money on both sides of the gun-control debate is pouring into the governor’s race in Connecticut, reports the Wall Street Journal, where the issue has taken on deep resonance since the deadly shooting at a Newtown school. Americans for Responsible Solutions, founded by former U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, has spent about $750,000 on the race. The National Shooting Sports Foundation says it will be spending “a multiple of seven figures” on races in Connecticut and Colorado, which also has recently passed gun restrictions.

The Gun Lobby Lap Dogs of Congress

PR Newswire reports that the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence has launched a video, website and scorecard exposing members of Congress for the campaign dollars they have taken from the corporate gun lobby, while blocking life-saving legislation that would keep guns out of the hands of criminals.  The lapdogscorecard.org website and video calls out all legislators based on two simple criteria: do they take money from the corporate gun lobby, and do they support expanding Brady background checks to online and gun show sales?

Toyota Recalls Mount as Automaker Faces Increasing Scrutiny

Automotive News reports that Toyota Motor Corp. made its fourth global recall involving more than a million vehicles this year, as the world’s largest automaker begins operating with stricter supervision over safety from U.S. regulators. The carmaker is calling back 1.75 million vehicles, including 759,000 Toyota and Lexus sedans to repair fuel pipes that could leak and raise fire risks.

Law Center and Americans for Responsible Solutions Release Toolkit on Guns and Domestic Violence

To recognize Domestic Violence Awareness Month this October, the Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence and Americans for Responsible Solutions has released a new report, Commonsense Solutions: State Laws to Address Gun Violence Against Women. This toolkit for legislators and advocates both documents existing laws on guns and domestic violence and offers suggestions for commonsense gun laws to better protect victims of domestic violence.

G.O.P. Error Reveals Donors and the Price of Access

Recently published documents, reports The New York Times, show that many of America’s most prominent companies, from Aetna to Walmart, have poured millions of dollars into the campaigns of Republican governors since 2008. “This is a classic example of how corporations are trying to use secret money, hidden from the American people, to buy influence, and how the governors association is selling it,” said Fred Wertheimer, the president of Democracy 21, a nonpartisan group that advocates more transparency and controls over political money.

Lawmakers Probe ‘Staggering’ Price Hikes for Generic Drugs

In response to recent reports that the cost of some generic drugs has been unexpectedly rising at a rapid clip, reports the Wall Street Journal, two members of Congress have launched an investigation and asked 14 generic drug makers to provide data about what the lawmakers called the “escalating prices they have been charging” for generic medicines.

Pennsylvania Could Give the NRA the Right to Sue Cities

Cities in Pennsylvania may have to think carefully before passing ordinances relating to guns and gun control in future years, reports the Washington Post, since doing so could land them in legal trouble with the National Rifle Association. The Pennsylvania state House last week passed a measure that would give anyone who may legally own a firearm, or a membership organization like the NRA, the legal standing to sue any municipality that enacts gun laws that are more stringent than the state’s.