A new study says nearly two-thirds of Americans are not bothered by electronic cigarette use in public–an opinion that presents a stark contrast with many lawmakers in Washington.
The study, conducted by Harris interactive, comes about a month after a group of Democratic senators demanded an apology from the Hollywood Foreign Press and NBC for airing footage of celebrities smoking e-cigarettes during the Golden Globes. The senators claimed the footage during NBC’s live broadcast encouraged teenagers to begin using e-cigarettes, but makers of those products strongly disagree.
“You have to start with who the target consumer is. We go after the current smoker,” Mistic CEO John Wiesehan, Jr. said in the company press release. “We’re not trying to attract those who don’t already smoke.”
But it’s not only the e-cigarette corporations who’ve backed the product’s use. The new study shows 71% of men and 55% of women surveyed were not bothered by e-cigarette use in their vicinity while out in public. At sporting events, 58% said they didn’t mind somebody using an electronic cigarette near them. But only 26% of those surveyed approved of e-cigarette usage on planes.









