From: The Nation
by Lee Fang
Several former lobbyists and executives are working crucial staff positions in the new Congress.
by Lee Fang
Several former lobbyists and executives are working crucial staff positions in the new Congress.
Until a few weeks ago, Joel Leftwich was a
senior lobbyist for the largest food and beverage
company in the United States. During his tenure at
PepsiCo—maker of Cheetos, Lay’s potato chips and,
of course, Pepsi-Cola—the company had played a
leading role in efforts to beat back local soda
taxes and ensure that junk food remained available
in schools. But PepsiCo also faced new challenges
at the federal level. The Healthy, Hunger-Free
Kids Act, championed by Michelle Obama, had placed
new nutrition standards on school lunches. PepsiCo
sent teams of lobbyists to Capitol Hill, deluged
political candidates with donations, and fired off
letters to regulators asking them to weaken the
new rules. One such PepsiCo letter requested the
redefinition of a “school day” so the company
could continue to sell its sugary sports drinks at
“early morning sports practices.” Leftwich, a
former congressional liaison for the Department of
Agriculture, was well positioned to help PepsiCo
shore up its allies in the House and Senate.
Last April, Leftwich paid a visit to one
such friend, Democratic Senator Debbie Stabenow of
Michigan, then chairwoman of the Senate
Agriculture Committee, to thank her for opposing
nutrition guidelines for food stamp purchases.
Now Leftwich will have far more access to
such friends. As the newly appointed staff
director of the Senate Agriculture Committee, now
under GOP control, Leftwich will have wide sway
over the law that funds school lunches, which is
up for reauthorization this year. PepsiCo can rest
easier, confident that the guidelines already in
place are unlikely to be strengthened—and may be
weakened instead. Leftwich’s new boss, Republican
Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas, who took over the
Agriculture Committee gavel in January, has set
his sights on dialing back school lunch nutrition
requirements, which he has called “Big Brother
government that’s out of control.” MORE
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