Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Make America Healthy' movement takes on Big Ag, in break with Republicans

EUR -
AED 4.357509
AFN 75.348021
ALL 96.451053
AMD 446.489821
ANG 2.123557
AOA 1088.041522
ARS 1657.047402
AUD 1.675762
AWG 2.135741
AZN 2.012674
BAM 1.955755
BBD 2.388646
BDT 145.036693
BGN 1.95497
BHD 0.447107
BIF 3498.52344
BMD 1.186523
BND 1.498985
BOB 8.194813
BRL 6.19982
BSD 1.185913
BTN 107.416551
BWP 15.641171
BYN 3.398851
BYR 23255.849813
BZD 2.385146
CAD 1.615338
CDF 2675.609538
CHF 0.911789
CLF 0.02592
CLP 1023.47104
CNY 8.197271
CNH 8.178637
COP 4345.400934
CRC 575.208702
CUC 1.186523
CUP 31.442858
CVE 110.262486
CZK 24.262436
DJF 211.182305
DKK 7.470906
DOP 73.881118
DZD 153.136445
EGP 55.343224
ERN 17.797844
ETB 184.694994
FJD 2.602698
FKP 0.869113
GBP 0.869947
GEL 3.173955
GGP 0.869113
GHS 13.050702
GIP 0.869113
GMD 87.206684
GNF 10408.806563
GTQ 9.095793
GYD 248.104344
HKD 9.272344
HNL 31.334474
HRK 7.53608
HTG 155.497765
HUF 378.909
IDR 19970.367766
ILS 3.667222
IMP 0.869113
INR 107.567204
IQD 1553.616956
IRR 49982.279441
ISK 145.01708
JEP 0.869113
JMD 185.602808
JOD 0.841233
JPY 181.590814
KES 152.919243
KGS 103.76171
KHR 4769.931456
KMF 492.407167
KPW 1067.912587
KRW 1712.01026
KWD 0.3638
KYD 0.988311
KZT 586.876405
LAK 25450.277763
LBP 106200.159064
LKR 366.704002
LRD 221.104959
LSL 19.033908
LTL 3.503494
LVL 0.717716
LYD 7.477082
MAD 10.843853
MDL 20.13722
MGA 5188.056622
MKD 61.640153
MMK 2490.97056
MNT 4231.830614
MOP 9.550504
MRU 47.265715
MUR 54.462808
MVR 18.278387
MWK 2056.422444
MXN 20.368897
MYR 4.62503
MZN 75.830955
NAD 19.033908
NGN 1605.899962
NIO 43.639189
NOK 11.274893
NPR 171.8726
NZD 1.967581
OMR 0.454185
PAB 1.185973
PEN 3.97881
PGK 5.090948
PHP 68.759073
PKR 331.68942
PLN 4.210792
PYG 7778.150445
QAR 4.322001
RON 5.082946
RSD 117.421282
RUB 91.635634
RWF 1731.418897
SAR 4.449578
SBD 9.545794
SCR 16.065411
SDG 713.694892
SEK 10.593105
SGD 1.497701
SHP 0.8902
SLE 29.010443
SLL 24880.792222
SOS 677.210245
SRD 44.796007
STD 24558.629478
STN 24.499751
SVC 10.377113
SYP 13122.439426
SZL 19.030208
THB 36.817313
TJS 11.188845
TMT 4.15283
TND 3.419222
TOP 2.856863
TRY 51.873362
TTD 8.050088
TWD 37.191524
TZS 3090.097862
UAH 51.145058
UGX 4197.904296
USD 1.186523
UYU 45.718958
UZS 14575.281914
VES 465.983241
VND 30814.001003
VUV 141.263698
WST 3.218107
XAF 655.964159
XAG 0.015671
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.206638
XCG 2.137323
XDR 0.815809
XOF 655.964159
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.807807
ZAR 18.905778
ZMK 10680.12858
ZMW 21.554417
ZWL 382.059906
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    0.3900

    58.93

    +0.66%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    25.71

    -0.47%

  • AZN

    1.0300

    205.55

    +0.5%

  • RELX

    2.2500

    31.06

    +7.24%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    86.5

    -1.8%

  • BTI

    -1.1100

    59.5

    -1.87%

  • NGG

    1.1800

    92.4

    +1.28%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    17.1

    +1.35%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.75

    +0.21%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    98.07

    +0.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0647

    23.64

    +0.27%

  • JRI

    0.2135

    13.24

    +1.61%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    15.57

    -0.32%

  • BP

    0.4700

    37.66

    +1.25%

'Make America Healthy' movement takes on Big Ag, in break with Republicans
'Make America Healthy' movement takes on Big Ag, in break with Republicans / Photo: SCOTT OLSON - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

'Make America Healthy' movement takes on Big Ag, in break with Republicans

From Wyoming to Florida and the capital Washington, "Make America Healthy Again" activists have notched wins across the United States against agricultural and chemical giants long protected by the conservative politicians they generally support.

Text size:

The MAHA movement is best known for championing Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr's policies on rolling back vaccine recommendations, overturning the traditional food pyramid, and pushing for the reduced use of synthetic food dyes.

But in its battles against pesticides and food industry interests, the network of mostly female activists has worked at times with conservation groups and even free-speech advocates -- not Republican lawmakers.

Researcher and influencer Kelly Ryerson said she felt "so good" after MAHA activists helped stall -- and likely kill -- Florida legislation that would give companies freer rein to sue critics of controversial agricultural practices such as pesticide use for defamation.

Those same activists also helped defeat a bill in Wyoming that would have made it harder to sue pesticide makers, and worked to hold up similar efforts in Tennessee, Kansas and in Congress, though the federal measure returned in draft form Friday.

But tensions are still simmering between Team MAHA and President Donald Trump's administration.

"It's frustrating seeing the chemical lobbyists getting what they asked for," against the wishes of "all of the people that actually put this administration into office," Ryerson told AFP, referring to voters.

- Getting the message out -

Last year, Ryerson launched an online petition, co-signed by fellow MAHA movement leaders and thousands of supporters, calling for the resignation of Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin for allegedly prioritizing chemical industry interests over public safety.

Though they later held meetings to smooth over their differences, the network is again livid following the reauthorization of German agrochemical giant Bayer's dicamba herbicide for sprayed use on genetically modified soybean and cotton.

"I'm very concerned about the situation at the EPA and the fact that it appears to be run by chemical lobbyists rather than people that are committed to protecting people's health," toxicologist Alexandra Munoz, who works with MAHA and has given expert testimony in several state legislatures, told AFP.

Ryerson said it was "very undervalued how important the pesticide and EPA component is to the voting population."

The movement is energized.

Ryerson -- who uses the handle Glyphosate Girl online, in a reference to the herbicide -- says Instagram is her primary outreach tool, where she alerts followers to pending legislation and urges them to call and email lawmakers.

Her messages are amplified by other MAHA figures including nutritionist Courtney Swan, "Food Babe" Vani Hari and conservative podcaster Alex Clark.

- Looming battles -

The Florida proposal would have expanded the state's existing "veggie libel" law, making it easier for food producers to sue critics -- including activists, researchers and journalists -- and was seen by opponents as benefiting the sugar industry, which has faced accusations of polluting waterways.

MAHA was joined by conservation groups including Florida's Captains for Clean Water and Florida First Amendment Foundation, a free speech advocacy organization.

The pesticide bills seek to bar states from issuing guidance or requiring warning labels on the potential harms if those warnings are not consistent with the EPA's assessment -- even though many researchers warn federal rules are often out-of-step with scientific realities.

Decried by critics as "immunity shields," the measures are a priority for industry groups including the Modern Ag Alliance, founded by Bayer.

Bayer also has a related case before the US Supreme Court, on which it has gained the Trump administration's support.

The company disputes the characterization of such laws as shielding corporate interests.

"We agree that no company should have blanket immunity," it said in a statement to AFP, adding the legislation "simply seeks to reaffirm that EPA is the primary federal authority" for pesticide labeling.

Ryerson, who worked on Kennedy's independent presidential campaign, said she was tired of successive Democratic and Republican administrations going too soft on the chemical industry.

Despite setbacks -- and the looming rematch in Congress over pesticide labeling -- she still pins her hopes on Trump to set the EPA straight on chemicals, just as he empowered Kennedy to make radical changes in health.

But she warns that continued battles could hurt Republicans at the ballot box, going so far as to say she "can't imagine a situation in which the midterms go the way of the Republicans" in November if MAHA concerns go unaddressed.

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)