The British government will publish plans on Thursday for a ban on smoking in public places in England, stopping short of total prohibition after a prolonged bout of ministerial wrangling.
Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt said her Health Improvement Bill would ban smoking in restaurants and bars where food is served.
But private members' clubs would be exempt and pubs that serve no food would be allowed to choose whether to continue to allow smoking or not.
That formula is the same as contained in the Labour party's manifesto for May's general election. It will be reviewed after three years.
"As promised in Labour's manifesto, the Health Bill will include a ban on smoking in enclosed workplaces and public places which will cover 99 percent of the workforce," Hewitt said in a statement.
A ban on smoking in all enclosed public places will take force in Scotland next March and Northern Ireland has also agreed a ban. England's would start in 2007.
All week, ministers have been at odds over the extent of the smoking ban, with some wanting to go further than promised at the election.
Hewitt had suggested a ban on smoking in virtually all enclosed public places, mirroring laws introduced in Ireland last year.
But she also wanted to give bars and restaurants the right to have a sectioned-off smoking room where bar staff would not be present.
Other ministers argued that even that was going too far while Hewitt's predecessor John Reid, who Blair moved from health to the defence portfolio after May's election, had fought for his own, less stringent, proposals to be retained. Before the election, Reid put forward a blueprint identical to the one Hewitt belatedly announced on Wednesday.
Reid, a former smoker, said governments should be careful about banning what was one of the few pleasures in life for some of the poorer people in Britain.
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