STAT 76.8%
Booze schmooze: The alcohol industry, frazzled by headwinds, wields its power behind the scenes
By Isabella Cueto, Lev Facher - 7/1/2026, 8:30 AM - 252 words
Faulty reasoning signals
- Confirmation Bias - 37.7% (95 hits)
- Anchoring Bias - 0%
- Availability Heuristic - 16.7% (42 hits)
- Representativeness Heuristic - 19.4% (49 hits)
- Hindsight Bias - 3.2% (8 hits)
- Overconfidence Bias - 0%
- Framing Effect - 31.3% (79 hits)
- Loss Aversion - 0%
- Status Quo Bias - 0%
- Sunk Cost Effect - 0%
- Optimism Bias - 0%
- Pessimism Bias - 0%
Article text
Booze schmooze: The alcohol industry, frazzled by headwinds, wields its power behind the scenes
Len Lichtenfeld had a long-overdue apology to make.
He was haunted in late 2024 by an exchange with a New York Times reporter almost a decade earlier, during which Lichtenfeld defended the American Cancer Society’s official stance that a drink or two a day was safe, even for cancer prevention.
There was mounting evidence to the contrary, which he knew from epidemiologists on staff, but didn’t mention.
Lichtenfeld left something else out, too: Behind the scenes, the American Cancer Society was raking in millions of dollars from the alcohol industry through an annual New York City gala, the details of which are reported here for the first time.
“It was the right thing to do in 2020,” William Dahut, chief scientific officer at ACS, told STAT.
“The whole committee endorsed strongly where we stand now.”
Despite the society’s eventual turnabout, Lichtenfeld’s interaction with the reporter “weighed heavily” on him, because it exemplified how special interests can trickle into public health messaging, he said.
The United States’ attitude toward alcohol, its deadliest drug after tobacco, and the source of its most neglected addiction crisis, is a prime example.
STAT’s investigation finds the alcohol trade has been enormously successful at using allies and money to its benefit, smothering proposals that might cut into its profits.
Leveraging tactics that evoke the tobacco industry’s playbook, the industry has inserted itself into health philanthropy, federal science, and all levels of politics and policymaking.