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Yesterday (13 August), the US Institute for Justice – a national nonprofit public interest law firm – announced that it is partnering with Upside Foods to challenge Florida’s law prohibiting the manufacture, distribution or sale of cultivated meat.
Upside has filed a legal complaint in the US District Court for the Northern District of Florida, calling Florida’s SB 1084 ‘unconstitutional’. This injunction comes just 42 days after the ban in Florida came into effect.
In a statement on social media, Upside Foods said: “We’ve always thought it was clucked up that Florida’s politicians want to choose what you eat. We disagree. What you eat should be your choice – not something determined by special interests.”
Upside’s cultivated chicken has been deemed safe and approved for sale by the FDA and USDA. “We should trust their judgment more than inexperienced and uninformed politicians,” the statement added.
Upside Foods’ actions against the ban
So far, Upside Foods has:
📣 Started a petition against the ban
🤝 Worked behind the scenes to push back before the law went into effect
🌴 Held a tasting event days before the law went into effect to give Floridians a chance to try cultivated meat
Paul Sherman, senior attorney at the Institute of Justice, said in a press conference that the ban had ‘nothing to do with protecting public health and safety...Florida’s law is a transparent example of economic protectionism. It was passed following intense lobbying by cattle interests, and its protectionist purpose was no secret.”
Who, what, where, when, why?
This comes after Florida governor Ron DeSantis's announcement on 1 May that the legislation made it a second-degree misdemeanour to manufacture, transport, commercialise or sell cell-based meat within Florida, with penalties of $5,000 in fines, 60 days in jail and businesses having their licenses revoked.
At the time, DeSantis said: “What we’re protecting here is the industry against acts of man, against an ideological agenda that wants to finger agriculture as the problem, that views things like raising cattle as destroying our climate...the global elite’s plan to force the world to eat meat grown in a petri dish or bugs to achieve their authoritarian goals.”
He continued: “The bill that I’m going to sign today is going to say, basically, take your fake, lab-grown meat elsewhere. We’re not doing that in the state of Florida...This is not just being done willy-nilly. They want to do this stuff in a lab to be able to wipe the people sitting here out of business. We will not let that happen in the great state of Florida.”
Who are the defendants?
The listed defendants include Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, Attorney General Ashley Moody, and state attorneys from four of the biggest jurisdictions in Florida: Jack Campbell in the Second Judicial Circuit; Bruce Bartlett in the Sixth Judicial Circuit; Andrew Bain in the Ninth Judicial Circuit; and Katherine Fernandez Rundle in the Eleventh Judicial Circuit.
Wilton Simpson said yesterday on X (formerly Twitter): “This lawsuit is ridiculous. Lab-grown ‘meat’ is not proven to be safe enough for consumers and it is being pushed by a liberal agenda to shut down farms. Food security is a matter of national security, and our farmers are the first line of defence.”
“As Florida’s Commissioner of Agriculture, I will fight every day to protect a safe, affordable, and abundant food supply. States are the laboratory of democracy, and Florida has the right to not be a corporate guinea pig. Leave the Frankenmeat experiment to California.”