Tell Starbucks: Drop out of the anti-GMO labeling lawsuit
Petition to Starbucks:
"As a member of the Grocery Manufacturers Association, Starbucks
is part of a special interest lawsuit to bring down Vermont’s
first-in-the-nation GMO labeling law and keep people in the dark about
what's in our food. Drop out of this lawsuit by ending your membership in
the GMA immediately."
Add your name:
Dear Cassandra,
If you purchase a coffee drink at your neighborhood Starbucks this
winter, you’re probably not doing it to stop GMO labeling.
But due to Starbucks’ membership in the Grocery Manufacturers
Association – the massive food industry front group that is leading tthe
lawsuit to overturn Vermont’s landmark GMO labeling law – the next
coffee drink you purchase could support efforts to keep Americans in the
dark about what’s in our food.
Sign the petition: Tell Starbucks to leave the Grocery Manufacturers
Association and stop fighting GMO labeling. Click here to sign the
petition.
Oral arguments in the crucial Vermont GMO labeling lawsuit are
expected to start in the next few weeks,1 so now is the
perfect time to pressure Starbucks to end its membership in the Grocery
Manufacturers Association and stop fighting GMO labeling.
Earlier this year, Vermont passed a law that would require all foods
containing GMOs to be labeled beginning in 2016. The Grocery
Manufacturers Association, of which Starbucks is a longtime member,
immediately filed a lawsuit against the state, claiming that requiring
food manufacturers to tell consumers what’s in their food would
unfairly burden businesses.
Suing the state of Vermont over its GMO labeling law is far from the only
thing the Grocery Manufacturers Association has done to keep consumers in
the dark about what’s in our food. It has spent millions of dollars
working to defeat GMO labeling ballot measures in California, Washington,
Oregon and Colorado – and it has largely succeeded.
Starbucks’ membership in the Grocery Manufacturers Association’s
lawsuit has attracted high-profile opposition from the musician Neil
Young, who announced last month that he is boycotting the company because
it “has teamed up with Monsanto to sue Vermont, and stop accurate food
labeling.†As Young explained on his website, "Monsanto might
not care what we think -- but as a public-facing company, Starbucks
does.†2
Join Neil Young in demanding that Starbucks leave the Grocery
Manufacturers Association and stop fighting GMO labeling. Click here to
sign the petition.
Starbucks is already scrambling to distance itself from the lawsuit with
a statement denying any involvement.3 But as Reuters pointed
out, Starbucks’ public relations spin doesn’t hold water:
- Internal GMA documents filed last year as part of a lawsuit in
Washington State revealed members contribute to a "Defense of Brands
Strategic Account" designed "to help the industry fund programs
to address the threats from motivated and well financed
activists."4
Moreover, the Grocery Manufacturers Association lawsuit states that
“Plaintiffs represent manufacturers who are subject to the Act, who
fundamentally disagree with the message it forces them to convey…â†As
long as Starbucks remains a member of the Grocery Manufacturers
Association, it is participating in the effort to strike down Vermont’s
GMO labeling law.
Starbucks’ statement on the lawsuit also says, “as a company with
stores and a product presence in every state, we prefer a national
solution. Given the Tea Party control of the U.S. House of
Representatives and the fact that Republicans have taken control of the
U.S. Senate, there is currently no viable path to a federal GMO labeling
standard. As such, Starbucks’ role in overturning Vermont's landmark
GMO labeling law is working directly against our best opportunity to make
progress in the fight to know what's in our food.
Sign the petition: Starbucks must leave the Grocery Manufacturers
Association and stop fighting GMO labeling. Click here to sign the
petition.
Thanks for fighting for our right to know what's in our food.
Josh Nelson, Campaign Manager
CREDO Action from Working Assets
Add your name:
1.
"
Nation watching GMO labeling fight in Vermont," Burlington Free
Press, December 1, 2014.
2.
"
Neil Young Boycotts Starbucks Over GMO Lawsuit," Rolling Stone,
November 15, 2014.
3.
"
Starbucks Response to Questions and Litigation Regarding GMO
Labeling," Starbucks.
4.
"
Starbucks says wrongly accused of fighting Vermont GMO labeling
law," Reuters, November 17, 2014.
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