Food Politics

by Marion Nestle
Jun 2 2026

American Journal of Health Promotion: papers on misinformation: my latest

The True Health Initiative held its 2nd Annual Global Health Misinformation Symposium, in which I participated.  The papers from the symposium have just been published in the American Journal of Health Promotion.  They are available under the heading “Knowing Well, Being Well” on the journal’s site.  All are open access.  My contribution is here.

Food Politics in an Era of Misinformation

Marion Nestle, PhD, MPH

I write books about the politics of food, most recently What to Eat Now. When my first book on the topic, Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health, appeared in 2002, the first question everyone asked me was “What does food have to do with politics?” But since President Donald Trump appointed Robert F. Kennedy Jr as Secretary of Health and Human Services, I am no longer asked that question. Trump introduced Kennedy’s nomination with this statement: “For too long, Americans have been crushed by the industrial food complex and drug companies who have engaged in deception, misinformation, and disinformation when it comes to public health.”1 It is now more obvious than ever that just as food has cultural, religious, and socioeconomic dimensions, it also has political dimensions. Here, I present examples of how politics affects food choice in three areas especially vulnerable to misinformation: food and nutrition research, ultra-processed foods, and dietary guidelines.

Food and Nutrition Research

Food companies are not social service or public health agencies; their primary, first-priority job is to generate profits for shareholders. One way food companies express this priority is to sponsor research. But industry-funded studies tend to follow what Sheldon Krimsky termed the “funding effect”—industry-funded studies strongly tend to produce results favorable to the sponsor’s commercial interests.2 Such studies are not invariably biased in a corporate-friendly direction; they just are skewed in that direction more often than not. When researching my book on this topic, Unsavory Truth, I was only able to find 11 studies published on the funding effect in food and nutrition research (by 2018). These varied in methods, products, and health effects, but all reported benefits to sponsors’ interests. Recipients of industry funding often appear unaware of the influence of industry funding and deny it. They may conduct their studies according to high scientific standards, but investigations of funding effects demonstrate that the bias mainly shows up in the framing of the research question or in the interpretation of results (null results interpreted as positive, for example). It is one thing to call for open-ended research on diet and health, but quite another to request proposals for research to demonstrate benefits. Food companies are unlikely to sponsor research that might produce unfavorable results.3
Some scientists argue that concerns about funding effects represent ad hominem attacks on researchers. Career goals, scientific beliefs, dietary practices, and belief systems, they insist, are just as biasing as industry funding; disclosure is sufficient to deal with the problem.4 But not all influences in science pose conflicts of interest. All scientists have beliefs about the likely outcome of their research; they have hypotheses they are trying to prove. These beliefs differ among researchers, as do the outcomes of their studies. But with industry funding, the biases are the same; they tend to favor the sponsor’s interests.5 Companies fund studies to “prove” their products are superfoods, or health promoting, or at least not harmful. Industry-funded research is about marketing, not science.

Ultra-Processed Foods

In 2025, The Lancet released three comprehensive reports on the science,6 policy,7 and politics8 of ultra-processed foods (I am a co-author on the last two). The process for producing these reports was lengthy and difficult, not least because the journal’s editors were skeptical of the concept of ultra-processed foods and pushed the authors to clarify the concepts and strengthen the evidence. Eventually the editors were convinced; they introduced the reports with an editorial powerfully titled “Ultra-processed foods: time to put health before profit.”9
Ultra-processed foods were defined by Carlos Monteiro et al in 2009 according to what they called the Nova system, which divides foods into four categories based on their degree of processing: unprocessed or minimally processed (Nova 1), processed culinary ingredients (Nova 2), processed (Nova 3), and ultra-processed (Nova 4).6,10 Ultra-processed foods are industrially produced, do not resemble the foods from which they were produced, typically contain sugars, salt, and industrial chemicals, and are designed to be irresistible (if not addictive)–and highly profitable. Many studies link diets high in ultra-processed foods to poor health outcomes. Although most of these studies are observational and cannot prove causation, well controlled clinical trials demonstrate that ultra-processed diets induce people to greatly overconsume calories, without realizing it.11 This result alone is reason enough for advice to reduce consumption of ultra-processed foods.
Understandably, the food industry opposes this concept: eating less is bad for business. Food trade associations argue that all foods are processed, processing is necessary, and the concept of ultra-processed is poorly defined, especially because it excludes highly nutritious foods such as commercial whole wheat breads and yogurts. The food industry is joined in these criticisms by some nutrition scientists concerned about inaccuracies in observational studies and the short duration and limited number of subjects in the controlled clinical trials.12 These criticisms hold grains of truth, but the overwhelming preponderance of evidence argues in favor of advice to reduce intake of ultra-processed foods.
The food industry, however, is on the attack. It much prefers education focused on salt, sugar, and saturated fat (encouraging product reformulation) Business advisors call for strongly defending ultra-processed foods in two ways. The food industry should educate the public about the benefits of ultra-processed foods and the flaws in the Nova classification system; it also should conduct its own research to demonstrate those benefits and flaws13–misinformation via public relations and funded research.

Dietary Guidelines

The call for education brings me to the 2025-2030 dietary guidelines, supporting documents released on January 7, 2026, and the process used to produce them. When I was a member of the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee (DGAC) in 1995, we selected the topics to be researched, did the research, wrote the research report—and wrote the actual dietary guidelines. We turned these documents over to HHS and USDA to be printed. We were fully responsible for their content. That changed in 2005 when the agencies took over writing the guidelines. Since 2010, the agencies have taken over the entire process except for
the DGAC research review. The dietary guidelines are now an almost entirely political—rather than scientific—document.
The DGAC for the 2025-2030 guidelines was appointed during the previous administration; it released its report in December 2024.14 Its recommendations were much like those of previous guidelines since 1980: balance calories; eat more fruits, vegetables, and whole grains; reduce intake of sugars, sodium, saturated fat, alcohol, red and processed meat; choose low-fat dairy. Although this DGAC was asked to consider a recommendation on ultra-processed foods, it chose not to on the basis of flaws in observational data and the short duration of the one, then available, exceptionally well-controlled clinical trial conducted in a metabolic ward.11
The Trump administration’s HHS and USDA, however, rejected most of that report and started over. It gave nine experts three months or less to write their own reviews of the science; these formed the basis of the new guidelines and the new inverted pyramid food guide released under the slogan “Eat real food.” While most of the eight guidelines are similar to those issued previously, one of the differences is advice to limit intake of highly processed foods (a euphemism for ultra-processed). So far, so good.15
Beyond that advice, however, the new guidelines include recommendations less well supported by existing evidence. They call for prioritizing and doubling intake of protein (a euphemism for red meat), consuming whole milk, and choosing “healthy” fats rich in essential fatty acids. Unfortunately, the guidelines’ examples of such fats are olive oil, butter, and beef tallow, none of them good sources of the two essential fatty acids, linoleic and linolenic. Errors like these, confusing messages (add salt, but restrict sodium; eat animal fats but keep saturated fat to 10% or less of calories), and the way animal-source foods are presented in the accompanying website for the inverted pyramid (RealFood.gov), make the guidelines appear to have been influenced by the meat and dairy industries, especially because so many writers of the science summaries reported financial ties to meat and dairy trade associations.16 The guidelines also appear to reflect the dietary ideology of Secretary Kennedy, who consumes a publicly avowed carnivore diet.
The new dietary guidelines are aimed explicitly at personal responsibility for dietary choice. But placing the dietary burden entirely on individuals absolves the government from doing anything other than educate. If objections to the guidelines from the food industry have been mild so far, it is surely because its leaders know that education is not enough to change dietary behavior. They much prefer education to policies aimed at regulating product contents or marketing. But to really help people eat real food and reduce intake of ultra-processed foods, we need a wide range of policy options—taxes, subsidies, marketing, procurement, product placement7—to make healthier foods more available, accessible, and affordable, so that the healthy choice is the easier choice.

Declaration of conflicting interests

The author receives honoraria for lectures and royalties from books about the politics of food.

Funding

The author received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

ORCID iD

References

1. Trump DJ. @RealDonaldTrump; 2024. https://x.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1857170020427595797. Accessed 21 Mar 2026.
2. Krimsky S. Do financial conflicts of interest bias research? An inquiry into the “funding effect” hypothesis. Sci Technol Hum Val. 2013;38(4):566-587.
3. Nestle M. Unsavory Truth: How Food Companies Skew the Science of What We Eat.. Basic Books; 2018.
4. Cope MB, Allison DB. White hat bias: a threat to the integrity of scientific reporting. Acta Paediatr. 2010;99:1615-1617.
6. Monteiro CA, Louzada ML, Steele-Martinez E, et al. Ultra-processed foods and human health 1. Ultra-processed foods and human health: the main thesis and the evidence. Lancet. 2025;406(10520):2667-2684.
7. Scrinis G, Popkin BM, Covalan C, et al. Ultra-processed foods and human health 2. Policies to halt and reverse the rise in ultra-processed food production, marketing, and consumption. Lancet. 2025;406:2685-2702.
8. Baker P, Slater S, White M, et al. Ultra-processed foods and human health 3. Towards unified global action on ultra-processed foods: understanding commercial determinants, countering corporate power, and mobilising a public health response. Lancet. 2025;406(10520):2703-2726.
9. Lancet. Editorial: Ultra-Processed foods: time to put health before profit. 2025;406(10520):2601.
11. Hall KD, Ayuketah A, Brychta R, et al. Ultra-processed diets cause excess calorie intake and weight gain: an inpatient randomized controlled trial of ad libitum food intake. Cell Metab. 2019;30(1):67-77.e3.
12. Ludwig DS, Willett WC, Putt ME. Concerns over conclusions in an ultra-processed food trial. Nat Med. 2026;32(2):463-464.
16. Neves FS, Nilson EAF, Mendes LL, Khandpur N, Nestle M. The 2025–2030 US dietary guidelines: an analysis of scientific integrity and global health governance. Lancet Reg Health, Am. 2026;56:101402.
Jun 1 2026

Industry funded study of the week: beef again

I learned about this one first from a reader, Kevin Mitchell, and later from Leslie Raabe of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine.

Beef vs. Chicken: Surprising Results From New Prediabetes Study

A new randomized controlled trial (RCT) offers insight into one often-debated question: does eating red meat worsen metabolic health in people already at risk?  According to the findings, consuming 6 to 7 ounces (170 to 198 grams) of beef per day did not negatively affect markers linked to T2D or cardiovascular health in adults with prediabetes. The study appears in Current Developments in Nutrition.

To its credit, the source of this account, SciTechDaily, gives the complete reference.

“Effects of Diets Containing Beef Compared with Poultry on Pancreatic β-Cell Function and Other Cardiometabolic Health Indicators in Males and Females with Prediabetes: A Randomized, Crossover Trial” by Elizabeth Guzman, Indika Edirisinghe, Meredith L Wilcox, Carol F Kirkpatrick, Caryn G Adams, Britt M Burton-Freeman and Kevin C Maki, 30 October 2025, Current Developments in Nutrition.
DOI: 10.1016/j.cdnut.2025.107589

It also discloses the funding and conflicts of interest:

This research was funded by the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, a contractor to the Beef Checkoff, which was not involved in the data collection or analysis, nor publication of the findings, except for reviewing a draft of the manuscript prior to submission.

Disclosures: MLW is an employee of Midwest Biomedical Research, which has received research funding and consulting fees from food and pharmaceutical companies. CFK is an employee of Midwest Biomedical Research, which has received research funding and consulting fees from food and pharmaceutical companies. CGA is an employee of Midwest Biomedical Research, which has received research funding and consulting fees from food and pharmaceutical companies. BMBF has received research grant support from the California Strawberry Commission, Gallo Inc., Hass Avocado Board, National Institutes of Health/Nutrition for Precision Health Common Fund, National Mango Board, USDA/National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and the Watermelon Promotion Board; received honoraria for lectures from the National Mango Board, Today’s Dietitian, and the University of Missouri; and served on advisory boards for the McCormick Science Institute, the Nutrient Institute, and NutriSciences Innovation, LLC. KCM has received research grant support from Cargill, General Mills, Global Organization for EPA and DHA, Greenyn Biotechnology, Hass Avocado Board, Helaina, Inc., Indiana University Foundation, Matinas BioPharma, MDLifespan, Medifast, Inc., National Cattlemen’s Beef Association/Beef Checkoff, National Dairy Council, Naturmega, NewAmsterdam Pharma, Novo Nordisk, PepsiCo, Pharmavite, and Ro; and received consulting fees from and/or served on advisory boards of 89bio, Acasti Pharma, Beren Therapeutics, Bragg Live Food Products, Campbell’s Company, Eli Lilly and Company, Esperion Therapeutics, Inc., Helaina, Inc., Lonza Group, Matinas BioPharma, MDLifespan, National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, National Dairy Council, NewAmsterdam Pharma, NorthSea Therapeutics, Novo Nordisk, and Seed Inc.

Leslie Raabe sent another account of this study from The Independent.  it points out that the study

was released shortly after the Trump administration’s dietary guidelines, that puts animal protein at the top of the food pyramid.  Three of the guideline’s authors had financial relationships with the [Cattlemen’s] association, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine reported.

Comment

It is much to the beef industry’s advantage to find evidence that beef has no ill effects on health.  The Beef Board funds studies for that precise purpose; the results of the studies it funds find benefits or no ill effects more often than not.  Coincidence?  Hardly.  It’s not going to fund studies that might risk producing results that do not show benefits.  That’s why I consider industry-funded studies to be about marketing, not science.

If food companies were really interested in independent science, they could pool their funds and turn them over to a third party for soliciting research proposals and awarding grants.  That they are not interested in doing this tells you all you need to know.

May 29 2026

Weekend reading: Industry influenced opinion of the week

I usually do posts about conflicts of interest on Mondays, but wanted to acknowledge the death of Carlo Petrini right away this week.  So here’s the Monday post.

David A Cleveland, Research Professor in the Department of Geography, and Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, sent this one:

Skimming through this I found an emphasis on ‘nuance’, obscuring key distinctions, and calls for more research, while giving little attention to the fundamental basics that could be the basis for nutrition + env dietary guidelines, e.g. that same nutrients from animal-source foods have much higher climate and environmental impact than those nutrients from plant foods, or imported and off-season produce has higher impact than local in season.

The study: Conrad, Z. 2026. Should the Dietary Guidelines for Americans include sustainability? A critical perspective. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition:101309. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajcnut.2026.101309.

Its conclusion: “The federal government, which has responsibility for translating the scientific evidence into publicly accessible dietary guidance, is not currently well-positioned to communicate the nuances of nutrition-sustainability science to the general public.”

Conflict of interest: “ZC has received research awards for diet sustainability projects from the United States Department of Agriculture (Pulse Crop Health Initiative), the Jeffress Trust Awards Program for Research Advancing Health Equity, American Pistachio Growers, the National Dairy Council, and the National Pork Board.”

Comment: The beef industry did not pay for this commentary and neither did the dairy industry, both big contributors to greenhouse gas emissions.  The author reports working on sustainability projects for the dairy and pork industries, and understands the financial connections as posing conflicted interests, which they most certainly do.

The study begins with a useful review of attempts to get sustainability into the dietary guidelines, starting with the groundbreaking 1980 paper by Joan Gussow and Kate Clancy, “Dietary Guidelines for Sustainability” [16].  It covers the valiant attempt by the 2015 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee to recommend consideration of sustainability when making recommendations about intake of red meat. (here’s my version of that bizarre saga).  But the author concludes that we just don’t know enough about sustainability to make such recommendations.  I think we do.

May 28 2026

Artificial sweeteners: risks vs. benefits?

The FDA says artificial sweeteners are safe at current levels of use.  It has established Acceptable Daily Intakes for most of them.  These levels are much, much higher than anyone is likely to consume in a day.

But: The benefits and risk of these sweeteners continue to be debated.

The Benefits?

The Risks?

Comment

I continue to be baffled by artificial sweeteners.  I don’t knowingly eat them.  I don’t eat anything artificial, and I particularly do not like the taste of alternative sweeteners.  If I want to avoid sugar, I can and do.  Substitutes don’t work for me.

With that said, how harmful are they?  I wish I knew.  Plenty of studies suggest harm.  But the science is especially hard to do because sweeteners are typically consumed in such small amounts.

My advice about artificial sweeteners?  Avoid them if you can; they might be harmful and they are markers of ultra-processed foods.  If you cannot or do not want to avoid them, try to keep intake as low and infrequent as possible.  As with everything else in nutrition, the best way to prevent problems is to eat a wide variety of relatively unprocessed foods in small amounts.

Additional resources

Gary Ruskin reminds me that US Right to Know has fact sheets on sweeteners.

May 27 2026

Greenpeace finds microplastics in baby food pouches

Yes, I know baby food pouches are convenient and let babies feed themselves without making a mess.

But I can think of so many reasons not to use them.  Baby food pouches:

  • Contain foods that are generally too sweet.
  • Contain homogenious textures.
  • Do not teach babies about the color, taste, and texture of real foods.
  • Do not promote small motor skills.
  • Undermine baby-led weaning (exploring real foods).

Now here is one more reason to avoid them: microplastics.

Greenpeace has measured microplastics in Gerber baby food pouches.  As the press release says,

A new investigation commissioned by Greenpeace International has found microplastics in every baby food pouch it tested, and estimates that a single Gerber pouch contains more than 5,000 microplastic particles and more than 11,000 in a Happy Baby Organics pouch. The study traced the likely source to the plastic lining of the pouches themselves.

The report, Tiny Plastics, Big Problem: The Hidden Health Risks of Baby Food Plastic Pouches, and an accompanying technical report, reveal:

  • Researchers found up to 270 microplastic particles per teaspoon in Gerber pouches and up to 495 microplastic particles per teaspoon in Happy Baby Organics.
  • The study found at least one endocrine disrupting chemical in the packaging and the food.
  • The research suggests a link between polyethylene, the plastic lining the pouches, and some of the microplastics found in the baby food.

Greenpeace USA is calling on baby food companies to use packaging that will be safer for babies.  Sounds like a good idea.

This gives me an excuse to share what I’ve collected recently about microplastics.

Comment

As I see it, this issue has reached an action level.

  • Do what you can to avoid buying food and drinks in plastic containers.
  • Don’t let babies eat from plastic containers.
  • Let companies know you want them to use safer containers.
  • Applaud companies that change their packaging.
May 26 2026

Is Big Food in trouble? Five existential threats.

It’s impossible not to notice all the reports of declining food sales.  I’ve been talking about four existential threats to the food industry:

  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr (“The food industry is poisoning America”)
  • Ultra-processed foods (dietary guidelines advise eating less of them)
  • GLP-1 drugs (they reduce food intake)
  • Inflation (people can’t afford to overeat)

To these, I must add now one more.

  • SNAP restrictions (they decrease purchases of sodas and sweets)

The crisis

Effects on Big Food companies

The bottom line: Eating less is bad for business.

May 25 2026

RIP Carlo Petrini: a huge loss to the food world and to humanity

Carlo Petrini and Slow Food acolytes in Turin, 2016.

 

As a member of Slow Food USA, I received its notice about the death of its founder, Carlo Petrini, at age 76 in Bra, Italy.

A visionary leader and public intellectual with a profound commitment to the common good, human relationships, and the natural world, Carlo Petrini founded Slow Food, the international Terra Madre gathering, and the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo. Through these initiatives, he brought to life a global movement rooted in the values of good, clean, and fair food for all, connecting communities, farmers, food artisans, cooks, activists, and young people across the world.

Much has and will be written about his monumental importance to the Slow Food movement and to the food movement in general.  His story about its founding is legendary, triggered as it was by the placement of a McDonald’s at the base of the Spanish Steps in Rome.  Slow Food was to be the opposite of Fast Food—a celebration of the deliciousness of traditional, “real” foods consumed around the world.  He taught the world to treasure them.

He also established the University of Gastronomy in Bra, an exciting place; I taught there once.

Alas, I do not speak Italian, so I never got to know him well.  But I heard him speak many times (particularly enjoyably when translated by Corby Kummer).  I thought he was brilliant, and funny.  Our meetings were always warm and affectionate.

Here is one memory.  At the Slow Food Terra Madre in Turin in 2016, he drove up to me on an electric bike and insisted I get on it immediately.  I took the photo right after that.  There he was, surrounded by adoring fans.  I count myself among them.

This is an irreplaceable loss to the food movement, to humanity, and to me.

Other remembrances

May 22 2026

Dogs and cannabis edibles: readers weigh in

When I wrote about dogs getting stoned on cannabis edibles last week, I had no idea this was a thing.

From Bill Nesheim (my sort of son-in-law):

This has been a fairly big problem for hikers in New Hampshire.   I’ve seen a number of situations where dogs needed to be rescued from the mountains due to eating edibles dropped on the trail.  Here’s an example:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/hikenh4k/posts/10162254129628724/.

He then sent me another example (you can’t make this stuff up): Owner warns hikers after dogs sickened on trail: Dogs test positive for THC after eating human feces.  And yet another that cost an $800 veterinary bill.

From Michael Jacobson (founder, CSPI, now director of the National Food Museum):

I can relate.  Guests left an unzipped backpack in our basement. Shortly after they arrived, Oliver was moaning, unable to walk. We thought he had a stroke, but when we rushed him to the vet their verdict was that he was stoned. Turned out that our dear guests had two THC-chocolate bars in their backpack, which Oliver decided to eat. Twenty-four hours and two thousand dollars later, Oliver was back to normal.

From Tamar Haspel (science writer, Washington Post)

I saw your piece today — maybe worth mentioning that, if your dog eats weed brownies, it’s often the chocolate, not the weed, that poses the threat.

And how do I know this? Because Kevin and I visited friends in NY, and we had a bag of weed brownies in our luggage. Their beloved King Charles Cavalier spaniel excavated our bag to find them, and ate the whole thing. We came home from the theater that night and he was being really weird, so we figured it out and took him to the emergency vet, who assured us that the weed wasn’t going to be a problem – he’d just be stoned for a while – but they kept him for 2 days because of chocolate toxicity.

We were SO worried that we killed our friends’ dog! But he was fine.

Comment

Tamar is right about chocolate, especially dark chocolate.  It is not recommended for dogs; they don’t metabolize theobromine or caffeine well.  Dark chocolate can have a 3% fatality rate.

Dogs will eat anything!

The bottom line for pets: keep them away from owners’ and friends’ cannabis edibles.

The bottom line for kids: keep them away from all cannabis edibles, whether intended for humans or pets.

Addition, May 22

A reader, Mollie Morrissette of Pet Food Safety News wrote to point out that cat owners need to be careful about THC in cats.  Apparently, cats’ livers lack key glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) enzymes responsible for processing and eliminating organic compounds like THC and its by-products.  This means that THC toxins can last longer in a cat’s system.