House strips MAHA-hated pesticide provisions from farm bill
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- The broader farm bill cleared the House Thursday morning by a vote of 224-200.
- Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, who was helping lead the push to strip the pesticide language for Democrats, said the language represented a "handout to big agriculture, to big chemical."
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The House of Representatives on Thursday stripped a set of controversial provisions aimed at protecting pesticide manufacturers from the farm bill, following a Make America Healthy Again uprising that could have sunk the broader package.
The amendment led by Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla, to strip the language was passed by a vote of 280-142, after a bipartisan groundswell of opposition from lawmakers and MAHA advocates who said the provisions amounted to a "liability shield" to protect Bayer from allegations that its Roundup herbicide and its chemical glyphosate cause cancer. The broader farm bill cleared the House Thursday morning by a vote of 224-200.