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Congress's Big Gift to Monsanto
Tom Philpott
Mother Jones, July 2 2012
http://www.motherjones.com/tom-philpott/2012/07/gmo-industry-flexes-its-muscles-capitol-hill

If you want your crops to bear fruit, you have to feed the soil. Few industries
understand that old farming truism better than ag-biotech-the few companies that
dominate the market for genetically modified seeds and other novel farming
technologies. And they realize that the same wisdom applies to getting what you
want in Washington, DC.

According to this 2010 analysis from Food & Water Watch, the ag-biotech industry
spent $547.5 million between 1999 and 2009. It employed more than 100 lobbying
firms in 2010 alone, FWW reports, in addition to their own in-house lobbying
teams.
http://documents.foodandwaterwatch.org/doc/BiotechLobbying-web.pdf

The gusher continues. The most famous ag-biotech firm of all, Monsanto, spent
$1.4 million on lobbying in the first three months of 2012, after shelling out
$6.3 million total last year, "more than any other agribusiness firm except the
tobacco company Altria," reports the money-in-politics tracker OpenSecrets.Org.
http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2012/05/monsantos-deep-roots-in-washington.html

Industry trade groups like the Biotechnology Industry Organization and Croplife
America have weighed in with $1.8 million and $524,00, respectively.
http://bit.ly/Lf3BX5
http://bit.ly/Lf3BX6

What fruits have been borne by such generous fertilizing of the legislative
terrain? It's impossible to tie the fate of any bit of legislation directly to
an industry's lobbying power, but here are two unambiguous legislative victories
won on the Hill this month by Monsanto and its peers.

*As part of a flurry of last-minute activity ahead of last week's Senate farm
bill vote, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I.-Vermont) brought up an amendment that would
have explicitly allowed individual states to so something the industry has long
vigorously opposed: require the labeling of foods containing GM ingredients.

In doing so, Sanders was likely responding to events in his home state-the
Vermont legislature recently considered a wildly popular bill that would have
required labeling of GMOs, but it collapsed amid fears among lawmakers that
Monsanto would sue the state. A Congressional statement on the right of states
to label GMOs would go a long way toward allaying those fears.
http://bfpne.ws/Lf3FWL

The Sanders amendment might have been expected to draw bi-partisan support.
Polls consistently show that 90 percent of Americans, Democrats and Republicans
alike, favor labeling of GMO foods.
http://bit.ly/sEiUhO
http://bit.ly/Lf3avJ

In addition, there was something in it for both sides: for Republican senators,
an affirmation of states' rights; for Democrats, a thumb in the eye to a
powerful industry that would have energized the lefty base.

Yet Sanders' amendment proved unpopular on both sides of the aisle, crashing by
a vote of 73-26. (A listing of individual senators' votes can be found here.)
http://1.usa.gov/LE82qu

The battle over labeling now shifts to California, where voters will consider a
GM-labeling proposition in November. Tony Corbo of Food & Water Watch told me
that the defeat of the Sanders amendment means that a successful California
labeling proposition could be nullified in court, based on the argument that
states can't require more rigorous labeling than the FDA does.

Yet the ag-biotech industry is leaving nothing to chance. It rolled out the
Coalition Against the Costly Food Labeling Proposition with "major funding by
Council for Biotechnology Information and Grocery Manufacturers Association.,"
as the group's website puts it. In just the first three months of 2012-before
the labeling proposition even made it to ballot-those two organizations had
already donated $625,000 to the coalition, according to the California
Department of State. That's the most recent number available-I'll be checking in
for updates as the November election draws nearer.

*The second recent gift to the industry emerged from the other chamber of
Congress, the House. There, while the House agriculture-appropriations
subcommittee mulled a bill on ag spending for 2013, subcommittee chair Jack
Kingston (R-Ga.) inserted a pro-industry provision that that has nothing to do
with agriculture appropriations.

The provision Kingston added-a single paragraph buried in a 90-page bill,
Bloomberg reports-would allow farmers to plant farmers grow GM crops even during
legal appeals of the USDA's approval process-and even if a federal court orders
that the crops not be planted. It addresses one of the ag-biotech industry's
most persistent complaints: the USDA approval process keeps rubber-stamping its
products, but an anti-GMO group called the Center for Food Safety keeps
launching, and winning, lawsuits charging that the USDA didn't properly assess
the environmental impact of the novel crops, thus delaying their release into
farm fields. (I described the process in detail in this 2011 post).

Kingston had already established himself as a friend of the industry-in April,
the Biotechnology Industry Organization, whose members include ag-biotech giants
Monsanto and DuPont, named him its "legislator of the year for 2011-2012,"
declaring him a "champion of America's biotechnology industry" who has "helped
to protect funding for programs essential to the survival of biotechnology
companies across the United States." The Biotechnology Industry Organization has
intimate institutional knowledge of how Congress works-its president and CEO,
James C. Greenwood, has crept through the revolving door between government and
industry, taking his current position in 2005 immediately after a 12-year run as
a US Congressman from Pennsylvania.
http://www.bio.org/biography/james.greenwood

Before Kingston's subcommittee voted on the bill, the Greenwood lobbied in favor
of it, Bloomberg reports.

    A "stream of lawsuits" have slowed approvals and created uncertainties for
companies developing the modified plants, James C. Greenwood, president of the
Biotechnology Industry Organization ... said in a June 13 letter to Congress.
"The regulatory certainty provided by this legislative language would address an
immediate threat to the regulatory process."
http://buswk.co/MKZ88f

The bill, complete with its gift to the industry, sailed through the
ag-appropriations subcommittee and will likely be taken up by the full House
soon after the July 4 recess. Food & Water Watch's Tony Corbo told me the
provision has a solid chance it making it into law. Meanwhile, Rep. Peter
DeFazio (D.-Ore.) has signaled he will sponsor an amendment to the
ag-appropriations bill that would nullify Kingston's Monsanto-friendly
provision.

If the provision survives DeFazio's amendment and makes it to the Senate, what
are its chances of becoming the law of the land? Corbo suggested that voting on
Sanders' labeling amendment might serve as a proxy for how the upper chamber
would treat the House ag subcommittee's gift to ag biotech. In other words, the
Senate is fertile ground for the provision.
The Genetic Engineering News is produced by Thomas Wittman and EcoFarm, and supported by a generous donation from the Newman's Own Foundation.  Please pass this vital information on.  If you would like to get on this list go to www.eco-farm.org and select Newsletters.

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