By Ryan Hanrahan
Reuters’ Leah Douglas reported that “Republicans continued on Wednesday a years-long effort to override a 2018 California law that bans the sale in the state of pork from pigs kept in tightly confined spaces, arguing in a House Agriculture Committee hearing that the law is overly burdensome to farmers.”
“Proposition 12, which also sets housing standards for veal and eggs sold in the state, was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2023 after a legal challenge by the pork industry,” Douglas reported. “President Donald Trump’s administration sued California on July 9 over the law’s provisions for chicken housing, arguing it has contributed to higher egg prices.”
“Committee Chair Glenn ‘GT’ Thompson has sought to limit the law’s scope to California farmers, excluding farmers from other states who sell pork into California, in the next farm bill. The bill is an omnibus funding package passed every five years, and which is two years overdue,” Douglas reported. “‘The cost of compliance for small producers could actually push them out of the market altogether, leading to further consolidation in the industry,’ Thompson said in Wednesday’s hearing.”