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MAGA Congresswoman Faces Backlash for “Fresh and Affordable Foods Act”

Rep. Kat Cammack

MAGA-aligned Congresswoman Kat Cammack (R-FL) on Tuesday introduced a draft bill, the FRESH and Affordable Foods Act, which would reform rules on the information companies must provide to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) when submitting a notice that a food chemical is “generally recognized as safe” (GRAS).

Several food safety professionals and organizations are criticizing the bill, including Sarah Sorscher, Director of Regulatory Affairs for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, who in an op-ed in Food Safety News wrote: “While promising to strengthen food safety, the bill has two big rotten worms at its core: provisions that would broadly block state food safety policies while weakening current FDA authority over premarket safety review for substances used in foods.”

Sorscher added that “the bill contains industry-backed preemption provisions that would broadly wipe out state protections” related to the labeling, sale, and marketing of food and dietary supplements, pointing out that big food companies, including General Mills and Coca-Cola, “last year launched a multimillion dollar effort to broadly preempt state safety and labeling laws.”

Consumer Reports responded to the bill with a statement from Brian Ronholm, Director of Food Policy: “At a time when consumers are demanding the removal of toxic chemicals in their food and greater transparency about food ingredients, the FRESH Act would instead weaken existing regulations that provide a layer of critical protections for consumers.” He added, “this bill would represent a significant step backward for our food oversight system. Consumer Reports calls on Congress to reject this bill.”

According to the nonprofit organization Environmental Working Group (EWG), the bill would:

Melanie Benesh, EWG’s vice president for government affairs, said: “Every parent should be outraged that the food brands that want their trust propose leaving them with no protection from toxic chemicals in the food they serve their families. Allowing chemicals linked to cancer to be added to food without FDA approval – or without even sharing basic information with the FDA – will not make America healthy.” 


[NOTE: The U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Health will hold a hearing on Wednesday to consider the FRESH Act, among other pieces of legislation.]

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