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luv2fly

(2,564 posts)
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:29 PM 8 hrs ago

Shutdown Deal Kills Food Safety Rules

National Politics
Nov 11, 2025
Freddy Brewster
Luke Goldstein

Shutdown Deal Kills Food Safety Rules
After lobbyists spent big on the Trump administration and Democratic defectors, the government funding bill cut food-contamination rules and limited ultraprocessed-food research.

Amid a lobbying blitz and a flood of campaign cash, senators inserted language into this week’s emergency spending bill that eliminates rules designed to prevent food contamination and foodborne illnesses at farms and restaurants, according to legislative text reviewed by The Lever.

The bill would also limit the development of rules to regulate ultra-processed foods, despite such foods being derided by the “Make America Healthy Again Movement,” championed by President Donald Trump’s Health and Human Services Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

*snip*

The National Restaurant Association, “the largest food service trade association in the world” that lobbied on the food-tracking issues, donated $10,000 to the 2024 election of Sen. Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.), one of the seven Democrats who caved on the shutdown. The group gave another $5,000 to the 2024 election efforts of Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), who also voted for the funding bill.

Additionally, the National Grocers Association, a grocery and retail industry group that lobbied on food-tracking issues, donated $1,000 each to Kaine and Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), who also sided with Republicans.

More at https://www.levernews.com/shutdown-deal-kills-food-safety-rules

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To read the full article you need to give them your email and then will be asked to donate. You don't have to of course.

Rosen, Kaine, Durbin... *sigh

Note: The Lever is owned and published by David Sirota and is rated with a left bias by https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/the-daily-poster

11 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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BlueTsunami2018

(4,754 posts)
1. This win keeps getting better and better.
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:33 PM
8 hrs ago

I do find it hard to believe they’d sell out for a measly thousand dollars though.

UpInArms

(53,705 posts)
2. Donations made during the 2024 election cycle
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:33 PM
8 hrs ago

for $5,000 and $10,000 are not likely to have been a factor.

AZJonnie

(2,243 posts)
3. So the author apparently thinks $1,000 - $10,000 donations are enough to make our Senators cave?
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:36 PM
8 hrs ago

PUH-LEASE

How about we focus instead on WHO WROTE the parts of the "government funding bill" that "cut food-contamination rules and limited ultraprocessed-food research."?

I bet you any amount, that shit was *not* put in there by Durbin, Rosen, or any other Democrat.

With friends like David Sirota

luv2fly

(2,564 posts)
4. They all signed off on it knowing this was in there, no?
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:43 PM
8 hrs ago

All of the Dems that agreed to this should be hammered for it and whether they received any money is largely irrelevant.

Next time you shit your pants due to a food-borne illness, you know who to thank.

AZJonnie

(2,243 posts)
7. I'm about done with the circular firing squad at this point, so I'm going to respectfully hold my tongue
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:58 PM
8 hrs ago

cbabe

(5,896 posts)
5. Following 'Lobbying Blitz,' Senators Sneak Provision Killing Food Safety Rules Into Shutdown Bill
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:44 PM
8 hrs ago

A few more details:

https://www.commondreams.org/news/government-funding-bill-axes-food-inspection-regulations

Following ‘Lobbying Blitz,’ Senators Sneak Provision Killing Food Safety Rules Into Shutdown Bill

“The next time you go to a restaurant and then uncontrollably vomit and diarrhea in your pants, you should send a note of thanks to the Republican and Democratic senators,” said David Sirota, founder of The Lever.

STEPHEN PRAGER
Nov 12, 2025



As The Lever reported Tuesday, senators inserted language into the bill that would gut food safety regulations that prevent illness and death, as well as regulations on ultraprocessed foods

The changes come “amid a lobbying blitz and a flood of campaign cash” from the food and restaurant industries which have spent more than $13 million lobbying the White House, Congress, and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) this year.

Amid a surge of product recalls for bacteria like Listeria, Salmonella, and E. coli, the number of dangerous cases of foodborne illness doubled last year, according to the Public Interest Network. These illnesses annually result in around 53,000 hospitalizations and 900 deaths, according to a report from the Government Accountability Office.

Nevertheless, The Lever reports that the “new funding bill blocks federal rules designed to trace sources of outbreaks, and to prevent contamination of produce.” One provision bans the use of funds to administer or enforce the FDA’s “Requirements for Additional Traceability Records for Certain Foods,” published in November 2022.

… more …


AZJonnie

(2,243 posts)
8. These are clearly goals that the GQP/Trump are after, not Democrats
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 05:08 PM
8 hrs ago

Democrats are not in power. When we ARE back in power, should the voters decide in the majority that they care about things like this, we can put these safeguards back into place that the GQP and Trump are willfully endangering the public by removing.

Here are major steps taken by the Trump administration that experts consider to have reduced public safety regarding food-borne illnesses:

Slashed FDA staff and foreign food safety inspections: Massive cuts to FDA staffing led to the number of inspections of foreign food facilities reaching a historic low, increasing the risk of contaminated imported food entering the U.S. food supply. Current and former FDA officials, as well as food safety experts, directly blamed these staffing cuts for undermining food safety protections.​

Rolled back surveillance programs: The administration reduced the scope of FoodNet, the federal Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network, which had monitored eight major food-borne pathogens, down to just two: salmonella and a common E. coli strain. This step resulted in less detection of outbreaks and hindered efforts to track sources of foodborne illness.​

Delayed or suspended key safety rules: Rules designed to help quickly identify and remove harmful products from the food system were delayed, and quality control programs to ensure the consistency of pathogen testing across 170 laboratories were suspended due to staffing and budget reductions.​

Disbanded scientific advisory committees: The administration shut down two critical food safety committees—the National Advisory Committee on Microbiological Criteria for Foods (NACMCF) and the Advisory Committee on Meat and Poultry Inspection (ACMPI)—cutting off scientific advice for the USDA and FDA on new threats, standards, and responses. Experts described this as reckless, since these panels issued independent recommendations for handling outbreaks such as listeria and improving inspection technology.​

Revoked standards of identity (SOI) for food products: Many longstanding regulations on the composition and manufacturing of foods were revoked or proposed for revocation, removing requirements that protected against adulteration or mislabeling, as part of the broader deregulatory agenda.​

Weakened GRAS (Generally Recognized As Safe) additive review: Experts warned that lax GRAS policies allow ingredients into the food supply without adequate independent review, and called for reform that was not undertaken under the administration.​

Blocked or delayed traceability regulations: Funding and implementation for new record-keeping standards—in particular, those meant to track sources of outbreaks and prevent contamination of produce—were repeatedly postponed, often after lobbying from industry groups.​

Reduced stronger salmonella standards for chicken: Regulatory rollbacks included rescinding stricter limits for allowable salmonella in poultry, despite ongoing public health concerns regarding chicken-borne infections.​

Collectively, food safety scientists and regulatory experts have stated these actions increased the risk of outbreaks and slowed response to contamination, undermining decades of incremental progress in protecting Americans from food-borne illnesses.


But sure, hey ... lets blast Democrats!

luv2fly

(2,564 posts)
11. Anyone signing off on it deserves "blasting" as you refer to it, regardless of party
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 07:57 PM
5 hrs ago

But hey, defend it if you must.

pecosbob

(8,233 posts)
6. Doesn't show they're bought by special interests, but it does show they don't give a fuck about Americans' well-being.
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 04:48 PM
8 hrs ago

Crunchy Frog

(28,161 posts)
9. Do they really *want* their customers getting food borne illnesses?
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 05:14 PM
7 hrs ago

It seems like in the end that would be way more costly for those businesses.

I certainly don't feel like eating at a restaurant these days.

Rebl2

(17,204 posts)
10. Maybe
Wed Nov 12, 2025, 05:27 PM
7 hrs ago

some cheap fast food places don’t really care if customers get sick. I rarely, and I mean rarely eat out.

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