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January 05, 2026 | Source: The New Lede | by Carey Gillam
In a setback for the pesticide industry, Democrats have succeeded in removing a rider from a congressional appropriations bill that would have helped protect pesticide makers from being sued and could have hindered state efforts to warn about pesticide risks.
US Rep. Chellie Pingree, a Democrat from Maine and ranking member of the House Appropriations Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies Subcommittee, said Monday that the controversial measure pushed by the agrochemical giant Bayer and industry allies has been stripped from the 2026 funding bill.
The move is final, as Senate Republican leaders have agreed not to revisit the issue, Pingree said.
“I just drew a line in the sand and said this cannot stay in the bill,” Pingree said in an interview. “There has been intensive lobbying by Bayer. This has been quite a hard fight.”
The now-deleted language was part of a larger legislative effort that critics say is aimed at limiting litigation against pesticide industry leader Bayer, which sells the widely used Roundup herbicides.
An industry alliance set up by Bayer has been pushing for both state and federal laws that would make it harder for consumers to sue over pesticide risks to human health and has successfully passed such laws in two states so far.
The post A “Hard Fight”- Pesticide Industry Protection Stripped From Appropriations Bill appeared first on Organic Consumers.
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