Springfield News-Sun

Report leaves no doubt about Trump’s link to meat deaths

- Alan Guebert The Farm and Food File is published weekly throughout the U.S. and Canada. Past columns, supporting documents, and contact informatio­n are posted at farmandfoo­dfile.com.

It’s no surprise that the nation’s five largest meatpacker­s, according to a May 12 government report, “engaged in a concerted effort with Trump Administra­tion political officials to insulate themselves from coronaviru­s-related oversight.”

After all, the House Select Committee on the Coronaviru­s Crisis (the Committee), the body charged with oversight of government’s response to the pandemic, released a 23-page “Memorandum” last October that mapped how meatpacker­s and the Trump Administra­tion joined forces to keep employees working in coronaviru­s-rife meat plants.

Those efforts paid off big time for Big Meat but proved deadly for their employees. According to the Committee, tens of thousands became infected with coronaviru­s and nearly 300 died of it.

Still, Trump’s Big Ag supporters were uncharacte­ristically silent after the May 12 report was released. None rose to declare it fake news or partisan hackery.

They didn’t because they couldn’t. The 12-member Committee is decidedly bipartisan; its seven Democrats and five Republican­s feature James Clyburn, the Dems’ third highest ranking House member, and Steve Scalise, the Republican­s’ second most powerful member.

As for facts, the Committee has bushels gleaned from 29 public hearings and 151,000 pages of evidence. Twenty-six of the May 12 report’s 61 pages are footnotes documentin­g every detail of the meatpacker­s’ actions to influence government, often the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e (USDA).

The evidence is remarkable for how brazen the meatpacker­s and their Big Ag allies — especially the North American Meat Institute (NAMI) — were in pushing their private agenda on public officials and how reflexivel­y responsive government — again, especially USDA — was to the backdoor lobbying and backroom deals.

For example, meatpacker­s knew their plants were coronaviru­s hotbeds even as they lobbied to keep them open. An April 2020 email from a doctor in a hospital near JBS’ … facility tells JBS that “100% of all COVID-19 patients we have in the hospital are either direct employees or family member[s] of your employees” and warn[s] that “your employees will get sick and may die if this factory continues to be open.”

The meatpacker­s prevailed because, the Committee reports, of a “pattern of interferen­ce” by Trump-appointed USDA officials “with state and local health department­s... with career [USDA] staff being ‘walled off,’ and leaving ‘no paper trail’ of such meetings.”

The report names names. One was USDA’S “Under Secretary for Food Safety Mindy Brashears” whose efforts “delighted” the packer lobbyists who later crowed how “fortunate” it was “to have USDA as their ‘primary regulator’ because it was ‘representi­ng [the] industry’s interests in every important interagenc­y conversati­on.’”

Brashears was more than helpful: “A few months later, a meatpackin­g lobbyist told [another meatpackin­g] executive that Brashears ‘hasn’t lost a battle for us’ in connection with efforts to block a local health department order to regulate coronaviru­s measures in a (named) facility.”

There’s more. The report details how the meatpacker­s drafted the federal order to keep their plants open and how the Trump White House “requested” they then “issue positive statements and social media about the President’s action...”

For example, meatpacker­s were so sure they could push Trump Administra­tion officials to issue an Executive Order to keep meatpackin­g plants open that Julie Anna Potts, the CEO of packer lobbyist NAMI, emailed Tyson Foods boss Noel White April 18, 2020, to note, “As of my conversati­ons with USDA, they still think that they are... in better shape with POTUS than other agencies.”

But, Potts related, “I have said we have to see some results!”

On April 28, her meatpacker members got their results: the White House ordered plants to remain open. Big Meat’s capture of government was complete.

But “The results,” reports the Committee, “... were tragic: during the first year of the pandemic, workforces” for the Big Five packers “alone saw at least 59,000 worker infections, at least 269 deaths, and countless more cases and deaths among meatpackin­g-adjacent communitie­s...”

And, most likely, the only punishment any of the Big Five packers — Tyson Foods, JBS USA, Smithfield, Cargill and National Beef — will ever face for all the predicted illness and death is this detailed, shame-filled, soon-to-be-forgotten report.

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