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Food Lobby Mobilizes, As Soda Tax Bubbles Up

HuffPost Investigative Fund   First Posted: 03/18/10 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 03:35 PM ET

Soda

By Christine Spolar, Huffington Post Investigative Fund and Joseph Eaton, Staff Writer, Center for Public Integrity

Washington lobbyists have been enjoying a multi-million-dollar sugar rush from the food industry.

Soft drink makers, supermarket companies, agriculture and the fast-food business have poured millions into campaigning against what they fear could be a burgeoning national movement to raise money for health care reform by taxing sweetened beverages.

During the first nine months of 2009, the industry groups stepped up their lobbying in Congress. They have spent more than $24 million on the issue of a national excise tax on sweetened beverages and on other legislative and regulatory issues, according to an examination of lobbying reports filed with the Senate Office of Public Records. The review shows that 21 companies and organizations reported that they lobbied specifically on the proposed tax on sugar-sweetened beverages - which among other things would include sodas, juice drinks and chocolate milk.

About $5 million of the money was spent on a national advertising campaign aimed at Capitol Hill lawmakers and promoting a newly formed coalition called Americans Against Food Taxes . The group bills itself on its website as a coalition of "responsible individuals, financially-strapped families, [and] small and large businesses" but its 400-plus membership list is dominated by industry heavyweights such as Burger King Corporation, Coca Cola, Pepsico and Domino's Pizza.

Many health officials and advocacy groups have argued for years that sugary drinks, particularly those with high-fructose corn syrup, have been key contributors to a rise in obesity rates in the United States, especially among children. Some argue that the time is right for a soda tax, which they say could not only cut consumption but also generate revenue to close state budget gaps and pay for new health care programs.

A proposal for a national excise tax on soft drinks surfaced in a May funding policy options paper during the Senate Finance Committee's deliberations on health care reform. Food lobbyists attacked then and continued their efforts in July when President Obama raised the possibility of a soda tax in an interview with Men's Health magazine. The proposal has not emerged in any of the health care reform bills still in play on Capitol Hill.

But the issue may be gaining traction in some key states. This week, California lawmakers are holding a high-profile hearing in Los Angeles to examine the link between childhood obesity and sugary drinks. In New York, Gov. David Paterson has revived the idea of a sugared beverage tax after a previous proposal was shot down by the legislature earlier this year in the face of industry opposition.

"We are reacting to the situation we find ourselves in," said Kevin Keane, senior vice president for the American Beverage Association, which alone spent more than $7.3 million on lobbying and advertising in the third quarter of 2009, more than six times what it spent in the previous quarter. "In the fourth quarter we are on target to do as much, if not more," Keane said. "We really don't know when the threat is over."

Lobbyists for the industry groups argue that soft drinks cannot be blamed for obesity. A beverage tax, they say, would unfairly single out one type of product and would be a particular burden on low-income people, who can least afford to pay a few cents more per can or bottle.

"To say soda is the only cause of obesity, that's not correct. Just walk down the street and count the number of White Castles or Burger Kings or Jack in the Box," said Nelson Eusebio, executive director of the National Supermarket Association. "If we eliminate soda, would people stay away from fried food, hot dogs and all the other junk out there?"

Supporters of a beverage tax make the comparison to tobacco, saying that it makes sense to impose a levy on sugary drinks to offset health care costs. Such beverages now account for 10 to 15 percent of the calories consumed by children and adolescents, according to an April 2009 report in the New England Journal of Medicine.

"For each extra can or glass of sugared beverage consumed per day, the likelihood of a child becoming obese increases by 60 percent," said the article, co-authored by Kelly D. Brownell, a professor of psychology at Yale University, and Thomas R. Frieden, a physician who was then New York City health commissioner and now heads the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Sugar-sweetened beverages ... may be the single largest driver of the obesity epidemic," wrote the authors, who argued for a federal or state tax.

In the Senate, a federal beverage tax was not perceived as a deep enough well of potential revenue, some congressional aides said in interviews. Others pointed out that the members of the Senate Finance Committee are especially sympathetic to the food industry: Democratic Chairman Max Baucus hails from Montana, a large producer of sugar beets. Iowa, the home state of ranking Republican Chuck Grassley, is the nation's largest producer of corn.

"It ran into a committee with a lot of farm members," said Chuck Marr, director of federal policy at the Center of Budget and Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan, nonprofit think tank in Washington that examines fiscal policies. "Senate Finance is a farm-dominated committee."

The National Corn Growers Association spent $200,000 to lobby Congress against the tax and other issues through September, records show. Jon Doggett, an association spokesman, said other factions of the sugar lobby pushed hard on Congress, but didn't describe their work on public filings as specific to the sweetened beverage tax. "They have kind of kept their heads down a little bit," Doggett said. "Nobody plays politics better than the sugar guys."

In state capitals, the financial crisis has sparked more interest from officials scrambling to make up for lost tax revenue. Although 33 states have sales taxes that apply to soda, the taxes are not aimed at raising money for health care and generally are too low to affect consumption, according to another New England Journal of Medicine article. The Center for Science in the Public Interest, a health advocacy group, released a study this October that estimated that states could generate as much as $10 billion a year by adding a seven-cent tax to a 12-ounce can.

This week's hearing in Los Angeles, sponsored by Democratic state Sen. Alex Padilla, was prompted by a policy brief on soda consumption called "Bubbling Over," published in September by the California Center for Public Health Advocacy and UCLA. It found that 41 percent of the state's children between the ages of two and 11 drink at least one sweetened beverage a day.

One of the speakers will be Yale University's Brownell, co-founder and director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity. He said he expects to see the beverage tax adopted first by the states.

"It's just a matter of time," Brownell said. "If the tobacco tax is any precedent--and I think it is--it will happen first in the states. ... If politicians in other states see it happen in California, they will see it as a winning issue."

Keane, of the beverage association, agrees that the industry has never faced such a political challenge. He said he helped design the television ad campaign for Americans Against Food Taxes to focus on families and to point out how a new tax could squeeze the middle class. One scenario portrayed a family at a campsite as a narrator intoned: "This is no time for Congress to be adding taxes on the simple pleasures we all enjoy, like juice drinks and soda .... We all want to improve health care, but taxes never made anyone healthy."

In two other 30-second ads that played in prime time in the past few weeks, a young mother says: "They say it's only pennies. Well, those pennies add up when you're trying to feed a family. Washington, are you listening? What doesn't seem like much to you can be a lot to us."

Keane said the ads were aimed at lawmakers more than consumers. "We found that all the lawmakers in D.C. get their news on satellite, so we had to buy national cable ads to reach them," Keane said. "It directly targeted the policymakers and staff and those who are directly active and engaged in the process."

In addition to the producers of Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Dr. Pepper, and Snapple, Americans Against Food Taxes also counts the U.S. Chamber of Commerce among its many partners and has encouraged Hispanic and African-American interest groups to write letters and send e-mail blasts against the sugar tax as unfair to lower-income families.

Elena Rios, a physician who is president of the National Hispanic Medical Association, said she sided with the beverage industry because a tax on soda wouldn't be "a comprehensive approach" to health problems in her community.

"I'm not convinced that [a sugared beverage tax] is a positive incentive to make people aware of nutrition," Rios said. "So instead of sugar, what do they use? Sweetener? I think we have to step back and take a broad approach."

The National Supermarket Association's Eusebio, a leader in Americans Against Food Taxes, said his organization is providing grassroots manpower. When New York Gov. Paterson raised the possibility of a soda tax, Eusebio organized petition drives in neighborhoods that would feel the pinch of a few pennies on a can of Coke.

At Key Food Supermarket at 161st Street in New York, shoppers who wanted to protest the tax waited in a line that stretched a city block, Eusebio said.

He has since coordinated with grocer associations in South Florida, Massachusetts and Connecticut - all who see a nickel-a-can tax as prohibitive.

"Unfortunately, these days whenever a state or federal government needs money--and right now the state of New York needs money--this is what happens," Eusebio said. "They are trying to make this out as something else. This is just a way to raise money."



 

Soft Drink Tax Lobby
A proposed soda tax to fund health care reform spurred lobby spending during the first three quarters of 2009. A look at the top 10 companies and organizations lobbying this issue. Editor's Note: Figures for Coca-Cola Enterprises and Coca-Cola Company have been combined. (Source: U.S. Senate Lobbying Contributions Database)

 

 






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By Christine Spolar, Huffington Post Investigative Fund and Joseph Eaton, Staff Writer, Center for Public Integrity Washington lobbyists have been enjoying a multi-million-dollar sugar rush from the ...
By Christine Spolar, Huffington Post Investigative Fund and Joseph Eaton, Staff Writer, Center for Public Integrity Washington lobbyists have been enjoying a multi-million-dollar sugar rush from the ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Poorsarah
12:20 AM on 11/07/2009
Soda pop is basically slowly poisoning our bodies over a long period of time...I guess money/power cannot purchase common sense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ReedYoung
global mean temperature, obviously INCREASING
05:29 PM on 11/06/2009
"Lobbyists for the industry groups argue that soft drinks cannot be blamed for obesity."
Anybody have a link to peer reviewed research that shows rates of obesity and consumption of high fructose corn syrup, in different locales, states or countries? That one product IS directly linked to type 2 diabetes, and obesity, and from there to heart disease.

"A beverage tax, they say, would unfairly single out one type of product and would be a particular burden on low-income people, who can least afford to pay a few cents more per can or bottle."
So how much less can they afford insulin and coronary surgery?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:54 PM on 11/06/2009
It would be completely un-American to tax coca cola
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KevinFitzz
Pleased to meet you, meat to please you!
12:36 PM on 11/06/2009
TAX soda cuz it makes you fat and rots your teeth! Why is soda not taxed? Cigs and booze are taxed and soda is no better for you.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
respectingothers
03:06 PM on 11/07/2009
plus it has no redeeming quality...no protein, no fiber, no antioxidants, no vitamins, probably less minerals than h20
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
commonsense68130
What did you expect? Plant a potato, get a potato.
10:11 AM on 11/06/2009
Well... at least this administration is creating jobs somewhere.
02:11 AM on 11/06/2009
"Huffinton?" Post Investigative Fund (on link page)

What are you paying these kids Ar.ianna? Can any of them spell?
It's your brand for chri.ssake.
10:42 PM on 11/05/2009
Here in Alabama, I've been seeing these ads against tax on sodas etc a lot---and I think they should add taxes to other items that are sold as 'good for you' when they really aren't. I read ingredients on a dry gravy mix the other day and sugar was listed at #3!! I think this is an excellent idea, for several reasons.

In this ad playing here a lot, this woman says this---- "They say it's only pennies. Well, those pennies add up when you're trying to feed a family. Washington, are you listening? What doesn't seem like much to you can be a lot to us."----The fact that if a person is 'trying to feed a family' maybe they don't need to supply their kids with sodas, maybe they should spend their money on food that has nutritional value in it!! Buying sugary drinks for your kids does not qualify as "trying to feed your family".

I would like to see this tax expanded to many other products sold as food that have sugar added to it, when it really doesn't make sense to add sugar to the item. Like the gravy mix--who would put sugar in homemade beef gravy?? It goes on and on when you read the list of ingredients in your food......
10:07 PM on 11/05/2009
Mix lemonade and sparkling water. Better than soda. Same bubbly effect.
10:06 PM on 11/05/2009
Tax high-fructose corn syrup! Tax the hell out of it! Please!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
09:14 PM on 11/05/2009
Try ice water with "true lemon" it won't kill your liver and kidneys like aspertame nor will it make you look like kirsty alley
08:18 PM on 11/05/2009
About a month ago I was surveyed about “high-fructose corn syrup,” but don’t know what group was responsible for the poll. It had some of the most confusing questions I’ve ever heard, and I told the interviewer I had no idea what he was talking about, but he pressed on. So when you start seeing poll results about how much voters think high-fructose corn syrup is wonderful/evil and should be taxed/not taxed, don’t believe a word of it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TallThinMan
05:48 PM on 11/05/2009
DRINK WATER PEOPLE!!!

THESE JUNK FOOD CORPORATIONS DONT LIKE BEING PENALIZED FOR POISONING CONSUMERS....

...THE PEOPLE HOLD THE POWER AT THE SUPERMARKET CHECKOUT LINE

BE WISE...NOT IMPULSIVE!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
respectingothers
03:08 PM on 11/07/2009
and drink it out of your tap! bottled water is a bunch of expensive hype
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KayCo
05:20 PM on 11/05/2009
I've seen the ad so many times:
"They say it's only pennies. Well, those pennies add up when you're trying to feed a family. Washington, are you listening? What doesn't seem like much to you can be a lot to us."

I just want to shout at this woman, "Why are you feeding your family soda?" I would think that feeding a family you want want to feed them things like meat, bread, milk, fruits and veg's, which she didn't mention would be taxed, but soda. Hey woman, no one is forcing you to spend money on soda! And when I talk about feeding my family, soda does not fall into the equation. My family has done just fine without soda, so the tax would not affect us all that much.

I have been monitoring the foods we buy and make a point to not buy things that have "high fructose corn syrup" listed in the ingredients. I may pay a little more but I feel better about what my family is eating.
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05:28 PM on 11/05/2009
By "us" she means multinational soft drink companies.
03:52 PM on 11/05/2009
Obama is ready to break his tax pledge to the middle class details here;

Fall of the Republic;

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VebOTc-7shU
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KayCo
05:56 PM on 11/05/2009
But he is not willing to break his pledge to allow us to keep our health insurance coverage to address the possibility of a single payer system. Seems to me like he made a deal with the devil( the health insurance industry) and is not willing to break any pledges to them, but the people...oh well.
03:25 PM on 11/05/2009
The main question in this debate is where the limit goes for societys interference in the individuals life. The ultra-liberalists seems to think that we all sit on an island of our own, and that our actions only means something for ourselves.
I will quote John Donne, who wrote this about 400 years ago:
"All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language; and every chapter must be so translated...As therefore the bell that rings to a sermon, calls not upon the preacher only, but upon the congregation to come: so this bell calls us all: but how much more me, who am brought so near the door by this sickness....No man is an island, entire of itself...any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee."

We are responsible for each other whether we likes it or not; also when it comes to unhealthy actions!