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Obama's Pesticide-Pushing Nominee
The president taps an exec from the pesticide lobby—which slammed Michelle Obama's organic garden—for a top agriculture post.
CLA is the American branch of CropLife International, a powerful global lobby; its members include agriculture giants such as Dow AgroSciences, Monsanto, and DuPont. Siddiqui joined the CLA in 2001 as a registered lobbyist, and since 2003 has served as its vice president of science and regulatory affairs. In that position, he's played a critical role in setting CLA’s domestic and international agenda.
(Photo by flickr user jekrub used under a Creative Commons license) Chiding Michelle Obama for not using "crop protection products" in her garden is one of the milder tactics CLA has deployed in service of its cause. During Siddiqui's tenure at the organization, it has lobbied aggressively to weaken domestic and international regulations on pesticides and other agricultural chemicals.
In 2005, the group participated in secret talks with the Environmental Protection Agency and the Office of Management and Budget on permitting pesticide testing on children. In 2006, CropLife America helped secure an exemption for American farmers from a worldwide ban on methyl bromide, an ozone-depleting pesticide. It has also actively worked to remove what it terms "trade irritants" on pesticides under NAFTA. In its 2008 annual report, CLA highlighted its "relentless" efforts to persuade negotiators to cut language "discriminatory to pesticides" from the 2008 Farm Bill. Meanwhile, its parent organization has fought to eliminate all tariffs on pesticides in World Trade Organization (WTO) trade negotiations.
After the nomination was announced, more than 80 organizations—including environmental groups and organic and local farm interests—wrote to the Senate Finance Committee in protest. "The Obama administration has said they're not going to put lobbyists in these roles in government, and [Siddiqui] was a lobbyist, he worked for industry," explained Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist working on food and environmental issues at the Union of Concerned Scientists. "The question is whether he can take a scientific, unbiased perspective on what works and doesn't work, rather than a trade agenda that primarily [supports] large US companies and the technologies they prefer."
While running for president, Obama promised Iowa voters that Big Ag would not call the shots on his administration's farm policy. "We'll tell ConAgra that it's not the Department of Agribusiness," he proclaimed. Yet agribusiness seems pretty satisfied with Siddiqui's nomination—more than 40 companies and trade groups signed a letter applauding it.
Siddiqui is a textbook example of the type of revolving door careerist that Obama promised to shun for key administration posts. Before joining CropLife, he held several jobs in Bill Clinton's Department of Agriculture, including senior agricultural trade adviser and undersecretary for marketing and regulatory programs. During that period, he advocated against efforts to label genetically modified foods.
Following Siddiqui's nomination earlier this year, the White House credited him for having led "the first phase of development for national organic natural food standards in the United States." What press officials didn't mention was that those standards received a barrage of criticism upon their release in 1998. As Mother Jones reported at the time, the first version of the rules "not only included the use of genetically engineered products but also allowed for irradiation and fertilization with sewage sludge—which can contain metals and toxic chemicals." In December 2000, after receiving more than 300,000 public comments, the Department of Agriculture strengthened the rules.
At his November 4 confirmation hearing, Siddiqui faced few tough questions from the finance committee. Only Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) asked for Siddiqui's views on sustainable agricultural practices and about his background working for the petrochemical industry. The nominee's response was vague. "I am a true believer in all processes, systems, whether using conventional means or organic, and I will do my best in terms of representing all these interests in promoting agriculture exports of both organic as well as conventionally grown products," he said.
The committee is expected to approve Siddiqui's nomination sometime this month. And critics aren't optimistic that he'll live up to his word and give sustainable agriculture a fair shake. "Given his background," said Gurian-Sherman "we think he's going to continue to push the industrial agriculture agenda he's been involved with for the past years."
Kate Sheppard covers energy and environmental politics from Washington, D.C. She Tweets here.
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20 Comments so far
Show AllThis is no surprise after seeing Obama responding to Glenn Beck's wishes while ignoring the wishes of the people who voted for him.
I am confused as to why "conventional agriculture" is being defined as that which uses chemical enhancement. It seems to me that growing food without adding pesticides and chemicals is what is actually "conventional"
Me too.
Well how about that? A man who has no respect for his own grandmother, ripped by Big Insurance, is the same man who has no respect for his own wife getting persecuted by Big Agri. This shows that this president has no support for genuine quality care for even his own never mind the country. His only interests are shilling for the monied elites, Chicago style.
To both women, my heart goes out to you. :(
Go organic. Grow organic. Tear up every patch of lawn and grow food. Whole countries are feeding themselves by doing this (see Cuba, South Korea). Yes, organic farming CAN feed the world. See this article at: http://nature.berkeley.edu/~christos/espm118/articles/organic_feed_world.pdf
This is unacceptable, call your rep's right now and tell them to stand against this appointment!
This is unacceptable, call your rep's right now and tell them to stand against this appointment!
Who represents me? Kucinich and Feingold can't represent all of us. I'm pretty sure I don't have a representative in congress or the executive branch. And all my contacts with the judicial branch have been unfavorable!
I think I'll stand against it myself, by buying less and less of the crap produced by these monstrous corporations.
THE PLAYACTING:
Then - Marie Antoinette dressed up as a peasant at Hameau.
Now - Michelle's organic garden. (How often does she weed it?)
THE POLICY:
Then - "Let them eat cake".
Now - "Let them eat chemically laden crap". (If they can afford it.)
Joe
What an apt analogy! What a toxic presidency....
Zyclone B was a pesticide. All in all I'd prefer organic.
Well, at least we know how many signatures on pressure are /were needed to get the DoA to shift its perspective. Too bad it didn't first make a scientifically based decision.
DoA at times reminds me of the meaning of the other acronym with same letters.
Thank you Sheppard and MoJo
"Liv'in in a poisoned land... somebody take my hand"
I splashed extracts of this article all over HuffPoo in about 10 article comments. If nothing else it will get quite a few reads there too:
=====
Obama's Pesticide-Pushing Nominee
Senior CropLife America (CLA), executive Dr "Isi" Siddiqui has been nominated for a key post: Chief Agricultural Negotiator for the office of the US Trade Representative (USTR).
If confirmed, Siddiqui will be responsible for, among other things, negotiating international agreements governing the use of pesticides.
CLA is the American branch of CropLife International, a powerful global lobby; its members include agriculture giants such as Dow AgroSciences, Monsanto, and DuPont. Siddiqui joined the CLA in 2001 as a registered lobbyist, and since 2003 has served as its vice president of science and regulatory affairs. In that position, he's played a critical role in setting CLA’s domestic and international agenda.
In 2005, the group participated in secret talks with the Environmental Protection Agency and the Office of Management and Budget on permitting pesticide testing on children. In 2006, CropLife America helped secure an exemption for American farmers from a worldwide ban on methyl bromide, an ozone-depleting pesticide. It has also actively worked to remove what it terms "trade irritants" on pesticides under NAFTA. In its 2008 annual report, CLA highlighted its "relentless" efforts to persuade negotiators to cut language "discriminatory to pesticides" from the 2008 Farm Bill. Meanwhile, its parent organization has fought to eliminate all tariffs on pesticides in World Trade Organization (WTO) trade negotiations.
http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/11/13-2
Thank you for doing that, Billy.
How many times can one sell one's soul to Mammon and say it's for bi-partisanship?
In this case the sale is counted in 4-year blocks.
Doesn't the US Senate have the guts to at least filibuster this jack ass into pulling his damn booty out of the way and put my booty in the damn job and paying me twice as much as the government would pay this excuse of a man.
AD
OK I probably wouldn't take the damn office anyway, but at least put somebody worth a damn in it anyway.
AD
Hey guys, instead of just bashing the president, you need to just make the difference yourself by buying only organic. There was only one comment here that truely made sense and showed how to fight back, and that was the one recommending you plant your own organic garden. Remember it's the people's actions that really make the difference, not the words we throw out into air space. Look how far we have already come by supporting the organic growers. Now just about every major supermarket has organic food at competative prices, even WallMart. So go on...take a look in your own kitchen cabinet, then at least be honest with yourself on what you buy most of, even if you won't be honest with us. Just buying a few organic items doesn't count. It helps, true, but as long as you buy the nonorganic when there is a choice, you are speaking volumes to the market place...and that is what you will get more of.