- The Washington Times - Updated: 3:27 p.m. on Tuesday, April 28, 2026

The visit of King Charles III on Tuesday holds an unexpected stipulation for members of Congress: No smoking.

The aroma of cigars has been put on pause on Capitol Hill until the British monarch departs, per House Speaker Mike Johnson’s request, meaning that some of the most enthusiastic smokers in Congress need to put down their stogies for his arrival.

Rep. Tom Cole, chair of the House Appropriations Committee, said Charles’ visit is an “honor,” even though he has to cut his smoking habit. The Oklahoma Republican — a professed cigar lover — said that he is not allowed to smoke in his office, which is next to the room where a photo op with the king is expected to take place.



“It’s out of respect for the king. Not by order of the king. It’s by order of the speaker,” Mr. Cole said.

Charles also delivered an address to a joint meeting of Congress on Tuesday.

Congress banned smoking throughout the Capitol in 2007 under Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Still, that ban was lifted in 2023 when Republicans gained control of the House, after Mr. Cole, House Rules Committee chairman, reversed the Capitol Hill smoking ban.

While smoking is banned in public areas of the Capitol, individual House members may allow it in their private offices, a practice not permitted in the Senate.

Charles recently gave royal assent to a landmark U.K. law establishing a “smoke-free generation,” making it an offense to sell cigarettes, cigars, pipe tobacco or chewing tobacco to anyone born after Jan.1, 2009, with the legal purchase age rising by one year every year going forward.

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While the British history with smoking went from elite fashion to a 20th-century mass addiction, his royal highness has long opposed smoking.

• Mary McCue Bell can be reached at mbell@washingtontimes.com.

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