
Abbott signs MAHA measure requiring food warning labels in Texas
While the law, which aligns with the 'Make America Healthy Again' goals of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is limited to Texas, the state's hefty population of more than 31 million gives it significant sway in the food industry.
'It's official! Make Texas Healthy Again has been signed!' State Sen. Lois Kolkhorst (R) posted Sunday night on X, adding that the measure would ensure 'consumers are informed and can make better choices for their families.'
The health law has other pillars: It mandates physical education and recess in schools and protects access to exercise even for kids in detention, and it requires that students in Texas pre-med programs and medical schools be taught about nutrition.
Curriculum for that program and K-12 health classes would be developed by a new Texas Nutrition Advisory Committee, from which anyone working in the processed food business — or their relatives — would be excluded.
But from a national perspective, the food labeling guidelines are the most significant, because any company that wants to sell in Texas will have to either remove those compounds or post a warning label.
The law contains one big exception: Food manufacturers will not have to disclose the presence of pesticides, which may cause as big a risk for cancer as smoking cigarettes.
But included among the chemicals are suspected cancer-causing chemicals such as potassium bromate, a common additive to bread products; titanium dioxide, a dye banned in the EU that is used to whiten soups and baked goods; the preservative BHA, which disrupts the all-encompassing endocrine system; and several synthetic food dyes such as Red 40 and Yellow 5 and 6 that are found to cause hyperactivity in children.
In 1986, Californians passed Proposition 65, which required companies to label consumer products that contained chemicals that could cause cancer, reproductive or developmental harm — leading many companies to reformulate their supply chains to avoid those products, one study found.
But this didn't necessarily make consumer products safer, researchers noted. Because material science advances far faster than the research into the harms caused by novel chemicals — let alone their regulation — in the aftermath of Proposition 65, many manufacturers reformulated products to remove harmful chemicals 'only to replace them with an unlisted chemical that might also be harmful but doesn't require a warning.'
Many of these will be hard for manufacturers to swap out for reasons related to their potential health impacts. Petroleum-based synthetic dyes like Red 40 and Yellow 6 for example, are used in candies and children's breakfast cereals because their stable chemical structure keeps colors bright in food that may sit on shelves for months.
And endocrine-disrupting chemicals such as BHA — despite the way they may play havoc on all the body's systems — are nonetheless more effective at keeping foods from rotting, despite their health impacts to consumers.
Two main food manufacturers — Kraft and General Mills — have announced plans to phase out food dyes this decade.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Politico
an hour ago
- Politico
Trump says he will put 100 percent tariff on semiconductors
'If you have made a commitment to build or are in the process of building, as many are, there is no tariff. If for some reason you say you are building and you don't build, we go back and add it up, it accumulates, and we will charge you at a later date. You have to pay,' Trump said. The U.S. imported more than $60 billion worth of semiconductors in 2024, including more than $50 billion from Asia. Leading suppliers include Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, the European Union, Thailand, South Korea and Japan. China exported about $2 billion worth of chips to the U.S. last year. It is a significant source of chips used in automotive manufacturing. The EU, as part of its recent trade deal with Trump, secured a commitment that it would only face a 15 percent tariff on semiconductors. South Korea and Japan appear to have won a similar commitment as well. Trump's announcement stems from an investigation that Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick launched on April 1 under Section 232 of the 1962 Trade Expansion Act. That legislation empowers the president to restrict imports deemed a risk to national security. The Semiconductor Industry Association, the main U.S. industry group, has warned that 'untargeted tariffs' could backfire on the U.S. 'by raising the cost of developing technology and manufacturing chips at home.' Ben Johansen contributed to this report.


Axios
2 hours ago
- Axios
What's new in Dallas-Fort Worth schools this year
North Texas schools are beginning the semester with more per-student funding from the state and several new laws to enforce, including a ban on students' cellphone use during school hours. Why it matters: The new academic year will not be a fresh start for many school districts amid staffing shortages, tight budgets and pressure to improve school performance ratings. The latest: A new state law mandates that districts establish policies prohibiting students from using personal communication devices such as cellphones and smart watches during school hours, with some exceptions. Another law increases teacher pay and districts' per-student funding by $55, the first base funding change since 2019. Zoom in: Fort Worth ISD is transitioning 15 of its campuses to an extended academic year that starts Monday and will end on June 30, with 25 more school days than the district's traditional year. Dallas ISD also returns to school on Monday but will end classes on May 27. The district is projecting a roughly $128 million budget shortfall for this year. The Carrollton-Farmers Branch and Plano school districts have consolidated students into fewer campuses this year after closing some schools in response to declining enrollment. What we're watching: Gov. Greg Abbott has called a special session and asked state lawmakers to consider eliminating the STAAR test.


Newsweek
2 hours ago
- Newsweek
Trump Brushes Off Major Success From First Term: 'Long Time Ago'
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. President Donald Trump on Wednesday brushed off what is widely considered to be among the biggest uncontested successes of his first term while reacting to Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s move to pull $500 million in funding for next-generation mRNA-based vaccines to tackle viruses like Covid, H5N1 and the flu. "You were the driving force behind Operation Warp Speed, these mRNA vaccines that are the gold standard," a reporter asked Trump during a White House event on Wednesday. Operation Warp Speed was a 2020 public-private partnership, initiated by the first Trump administration, aimed at accelerating the development and distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine. At the time, it was almost universally accepted that an effective vaccine for the coronavirus was at least 18 months to two years away. Trump's operation did it in less than a year. "Now, your health secretary is pulling back all the funding for research, he's saying that the risks outweigh the benefits, which puts him at odds with the entire medical community, and with you," the reporter continued. "What's going on?" "Research on what?" Trump asked. "Into mRNA vaccines," she clarified. "Well, we're going to look at that," the president replied. "We're talking about it and they're doing a very good job, and you know, that is a pass." Trump went on to briefly acknowledge the success of Operation Warp Speed before dismissing it. "Operation Warp Speed was, whether you're a Republican or Democrat, considered one of the most incredible things ever done in this country," the president said. "The efficiency, the way it was done, the distribution, everything about it has been amazing." Then he added: "But, you know, that was now a long time ago. And we're onto other things, but we are speaking about it. We have meetings about it ... we're looking for other answers to other problems, to other sicknesses and diseases and I think we're doing really well." This is a breaking news story. Updates to follow.