Revealed: US chlorinated chicken will be in trade deal

3rd June 2020 / United Kingdom
Revealed: US chlorinated chicken will be in trade deal

TruePublica Editor: The British government are working really hard on a trade deal with Trump’s America and stalling with the biggest trading partner in the world, the European Union. The idea is to quietly drift past the June 30th EU withdrawal agreement extension, force a hard Brexit through on December 31st but announce in early November the US/UK trade deal has been agreed just prior to the USA entering its presidential election. Along the way, Britain’s trading future sits in the hands of people like Liz Truss. The contest between pivoting towards the radical right of America or a more progressive, protective liberal centre ground with the EU has almost been lost. It’s strange isn’t it, that chicken may well end up being the iconography of this geopolitical pivot.

Brexit is an ideology deeply rooted in money and power and the article below from Unearthed demonstrates just how much money and power is being exerted to cajole Britain into accepting American standards and way of life. Leaked papers from secret trade talks between the US and UK show that both the US and UK governments have been discussing how best to sell factory-farmed chlorinated chicken like this to ‘sceptical’ consumers like you and me. This is only one example of many behind the scenes discussions that only leaks reveal. Under the cover of a pandemic, this government intends to outlaw (HERE) the publishing of leaks such as this – where journalists and editors will be very aware of the real risk that includes 13 years prison for acting as a foreign state spy simply for publishing public interest information. Soon, you’ll have no idea what those walking in the corridors of power are doing behind closed doors.

 

By Lawrence Carter and Joe Sandler Clarke: A powerful lobby group representing the United States’ largest chicken producers is working with allies in Congress to demand that a post-Brexit trade deal eliminates the UK’s ban on chlorinated chicken imports, Unearthed has revealed.

Ahead of the opening round of trade talks two weeks ago, 47 members of Congress wrote to the Trump administration’s top trade official on March 11 requesting that he “resolves this unscientific ban once and for all”.

The news comes after reports that UK trade secretary, Liz Truss, was preparing to slash tariffs on imports of agricultural products from the US – leading to fears that US meat that has been reared with lower welfare and food safety standards could flood the UK market.

Talks between the US and UK formally began two weeks ago, with both parties reportedly keen to secure some kind of trade agreement before November’s presidential elections.

The letter, which was spearheaded by a group of Congressional Representatives with close ties to major poultry producers, will increase the pressure on US negotiators to make chlorinated chicken a key issue in the talks, not least because trade deals negotiated by the White House can be blocked by Congress.

The prospect of the UK weakening its food and animal welfare standards to secure a trade deal with the US has become one of the most controversial issues surrounding the talks.

In a vote on an amendment to the agriculture bill earlier this week, a significant number of Tory MP’s voted against the party whip in an effort to ban chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef from coming into the UK.

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US food and environmental standards are weaker than the EU’s. Brussels takes a precautionary attitude to environmental and food policy, while the US takes a risk-based approach.

This means that some practises that are currently banned in the UK are accepted in the US. For example, American food producers can get away with having small quantities of “extraneous materials”, including “rodent filth” and “insect fragments”, in their products.

The US-permitted practise of dowsing chicken carcasses in chlorine and other microbial washes to kill bacteria is controversial because it can be used to compensate for poor animal welfare and hygiene practices in the supply chain.

But the European ban has become a red line issue for US agricultural interests – including the powerful National Chicken Council (NCC), which represents America’s largest chicken producers including giants, Tyson Foods and Pilgrims.

 

“Getting rid of the EU’s ban on using antimicrobial washes to clean chicken carcasses has been a long term objective of the US and it’s producers – there is no reason to think it would drop the demand when it comes to trade negotiations with the UK”

 

The NCC works closely with the House chicken caucus, a formal grouping of congressional representatives, which represents the industry’s positions in Washington DC and coordinated the letter.

The trade group collaborated with chicken caucus co-chair Steve Womack on the letter – supplying its endorsement for a press release sent out by the congressman and publicising the initiative on its website.

Of the 47 members of congress who signed the letter to the US trade representative, 29 have taken money in the form of campaign donations from the NCC since 2016, according to an Unearthed analysis of data collated by the non-profit Open Secrets. In total, these representatives received $287,500, with Womack alone taking in $27,500.

An NCC spokesperson told Unearthed: “We want ‘US chicken’ to be included in any trade deal, as does our government. Very few, if any, processing plants use chlorine any more.”

Sam Lowe, a trade policy expert and senior fellow at the Centre for European Reform explained: “Getting rid of the EU’s ban on using antimicrobial washes to clean chicken carcasses has been a long term objective of the US and it’s producers – there is no reason to think it would drop the demand when it comes to trade negotiations with the UK.”

But agreeing to allow in US chlorine-washed chicken could also jeopardize ongoing talks with the EU.

Back in October, Unearthed reported on a leaked memo from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) which warned that efforts to accommodate the US on food standards would jeopardise the UK’s chances of securing a meaningful deal with the EU, by far the UK’s biggest trading partner.

The UK government has always insisted that Brexit will not see a weakening of the country’s food and environmental laws. However, senior figures in the Conservative Party have played down the risks of products like chlorinated chicken, while talking up the opportunities of securing a deal with the US.

 

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