Total donations to the opposition to date total approximately $2 million, including recent contributions from biotech industry conglomerate Pioneer Hi-Bred, owned by DuPont ($310,100); the Biotechnology Industry Organization ($250,000), a Washington-based lobbying powerhouse funded by a long list of agrichemical companies including Monsanto; and chemical companies BASF ($126,600) and Syngenta ($63,300).
The Grocery Manufacturers Association,an industry lobby group whose president said that
defeating Prop 37 “is the single-highest priority for GMA this year,”
has given $375,000 to date.
Recent contributions from big food brands include Pepsico ($90,220); Nestlé ($61,471); Coca Cola ($61,208); ConAgra Foods ($56,598); Kellogg ($33,248); and J.M. Smucker ($20,396).
“Why are these giant corporations
spending so much money to hide the truth about what’s in their food?”
said Stacy Malkan, a spokeswoman for the Yes on 37 Right to Know Campaign.
“These same companies are already informing foreign consumers about
genetically engineered food in 49 other countries including all of
Europe, Japan, China and Russia.
Californians have a right to know
what’s in our food too.
“We’re in for another David versus Goliath fight. This is just the tip of the iceberg of what we expect will be millions more dollars flooding into misleading ad campaigns from multi-billion dollar businesses that don’t want us to know if our food has been genetically engineered.”
The Yes on 37 Campaign has received total contributions to date of approximately $2.4 million, with the largest recent donations coming from thousands of small donors who made contributions online through the Organic Consumers Fund ($400,000), as well as Nutiva ($50,000), Organic Valley ($50,000) and two individuals who donated $50,000 and $25,000 each.
Other contributors include Lundberg Family Farms, Amy’s Kitchen, Dr. Bronner’s Magic Soaps, Organic Valley, Nature’s Path and Dr. Joseph Mercola, who runs one of the largest health websites in the country.
“Yes on 37 is a grassroots people’s
movement made up of millions of consumers who support labeling and who
worked to get this measure on the ballot.
Concerned citizens — with
moms and grandmothers leading the charge — and businesses that want
fairness in our food system are standing up for our right to know what
we’re eating,” Malkan said.
Malkan pointed to the “One Million
More” drive that the campaign kicked off last week to organize another
million voters and volunteers who will take on America’s most powerful
corporations to demand accurate information about what’s in our food.
For more information: www.CARighttoKnow.org.
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