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Edwards Campaign Press Release - Edwards Unveils Detailed Proposals To Stop Imports Of Dangerous Foods, Toys And Medicines

November 07, 2007

Says President Bush and a broken system in Washington have left our children and families vulnerable to unsafe products

Manchester, NH – Today, Senator John Edwards detailed his latest proposals for protecting children and families from unsafe imports at forum with students at a middle school in Amherst, New Hampshire. Edwards unveiled his plans for protecting Americans from dangerous toys, strengthening food safety, ensuring that drug imports are safe, and taking on special interests to put Washington back on the side of regular families.

"America is facing a crisis of quality in imported products, food and medicine," Edwards said. "We can no longer rely on corporations to initiate recall after recall while our government sits on the sidelines and our nation's children and families remain at serious risk. Multinational corporations' race to cut costs by offshoring the production of drugs, toys and other consumer goods has come at the price of quality and safety.

"The broken system in Washington has created weak consumer protection regulations and bad trade deals leaving our children and families vulnerable to unsafe products. Worst all of all, this is not by accident – industry lobbying has persuaded Washington to keep protections for families lax and out-of-date. As president, I will overhaul our import safety system and stand up to the special interests who put corporate profit about the health and safety of the American people. It's time for our government to take steps to protect our children from dangerous toys, strengthen food safety regulations and ensure that drug imports are safe.

"But American families shouldn't have to wait until 2009 – they deserve to know right now that their government is doing everything possible to keep them safe. That's why today I sent a letter to President Bush demanding the resignation of Nancy Nord, the acting chair of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, who has accepted travel expenses from the toy industry and opposes congressional efforts to strengthen the CPSC and protect Americans families from dangerous imported toys."

Throughout the campaign, Edwards has showed that he has the backbone to stand up for regular families against multinational corporations and their lobbyists in Washington. Edwards has issued the boldest lobbying and ethics reforms to put Washington back on the side of the American people, and he is the only candidate in this race who has offered voters a detailed plan to overhaul our import safety system. Today's plan will:

  • Put Washington Back on the Side of Regular Families: Edwards will nominate officials who actually believe in their agencies' missions, ban industry gifts and travel to regulators, close the lobbyist revolving door and empower consumers with an improved web site for consumer complaints and recalls.
  • Protect American Children from Unsafe Toys: Edwards will ban lead in all children's products, require mandatory independent testing, give officials the authority to stop risky products at the border, stiffen penalties for wrongdoing and double funding for the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
  • Keep America's Food Safe: Edwards will finally enforce country-of-origin labeling, strengthen food safety authority, beef up inspections with mandatory recall powers and ensure that all exporting countries have tough safety systems of their own.
  • Ensure Safe Drug Imports: Edwards will station permanent FDA inspectors to conduct spot inspections in all countries with significant imports, starting with China and India. He will also demand that China regulates is chemical exporters and require "track and trace" pedigrees on all drugs to fight counterfeits.

The Edwards plan will go further than the half-measures recently proposed by President Bush by (1) calling for leadership at the Consumer Product Safety Commission who actually believe in the mission of the agency, starting with the resignation of acting chair Nancy Nord, (2) banning lead paint in all children's products, and (3) banning industry-bought gifts and travel and closing the lobbyist revolving door.

For more information on Edwards' plan for reforming our import safety system, please see the attached policy paper, "Protecting American Families from Unsafe Imports."


Protecting American Families from Unsafe Imports

"We cannot rely on industry for voluntary steps or wait for the broken system in Washington to act. America's families and our children deserve immediate action." – John Edwards

America is facing a crisis of quality in imported products, food and medicine. Multinational corporations' race to cut costs by offshoring the manufacturing of drugs, toys, and other consumer goods has come at the cost of quality and safety. As imports have skyrocketed, industry lobbying has persuaded Washington to keep protections for families lax and out-of-date. George Bush has appointed lobbyists and industry executives to key jobs responsible for protecting the rest of us.

John Edwards will create tough new rules to protect families. Edwards proposes action in four areas: (1) taking on special interests to put Washington back on the side of regular families, (2) protecting children from dangerous toys, (3) strengthening food safety, and (4) ensuring that drug imports are safe. The Edwards plan will go further than the half measures recently proposed by Bush by:

  • Calling for leadership at the Consumer Product Safety Commission who actually believe in the mission of the agency, starting with the resignation of acting chair Nancy Nord.
  • Banning lead paint in all children's products.
  • Banning industry-bought gifts and travel and closing the lobbyist revolving door.

Putting Washington Back on the Side of Families

In Washington today, there are more than 60 lobbyists for every member of Congress. It is not surprising that the safety of drugs, food, and consumer products come second to corporate interests. To put families first, Edwards will:

Put New Leadership at the Consumer Product Safety Commission: Officials responsible for product safety should look after families, not big corporations. Today Edwards called on President Bush to demand the resignation of Nancy Nord, the acting chair of the CPSC, who has accepted travel expenses from the toy industry and opposes congressional efforts to strengthen the CPSC to protect Americans families from dangerous imported toys. [AP, 11/2/07]

Ban Industry Gifts to Regulators: Senior CPSC officials, including Nord, have taken $60,000 of "gift travel" from industry groups to places like China, Spain and a Hilton Head golf resort. Edwards will ban executive branch regulatory staff from accepting travel or gifts from private industry or their lobbyists. [Chicago Tribune, 5/5/2007; Washington Post, 11/2/07]

Close the Lobbyist Revolving Door: The last three Bush picks to head the CPSC have been former lobbyists and the most recent chair is now an industry consultant. Edwards will bar federal lobbyists from taking senior executive jobs responsible for issues they lobbied on and bar appointees from lobbying their former colleagues for five years. [Associated Press, 11/6/07]

Empower Consumers with Real-Time Recall and Complaint Information: The CPSC fails to disclose complaints and investigative reports to the public while the offending companies prepare their defenses. Edwards will prioritize the families who are at risk, not industry, when deciding whether to disclose potential dangers. He will make it easier for consumers to register defects and risks and release consumers' complaints and recall information virtually immediately at a new website, "familysafetyfirst.gov."

Protecting American Children from Unsafe Toys

As the holiday season approaches, American parents need to know that someone is looking out for their children. John Edwards proposed concrete and common-sense steps to that will reduce the growing risk posed by unsafe imports and ensure the health of American children. He will:

Ban Lead in Children's Products: The ingestion of any amount of lead is harmful. As president, Edwards will ask the CPSC to prohibit lead at any level above the most minute trace amounts in children's products including toys and jewelry. [CU, 2007; Best, 2007; Best, 2004]

Require Independent Testing: Edwards will require manufacturers and private-label resellers to certify that the children's products they sell have been tested to meet U.S. safety standards. Testing must be conducted by an independent third-party organization accredited by CPSC, and products that have not have been certified should be banned.

Stop Risky Products at the Border: Until effective independent testing of all toys is in place, Edwards will give the Customs Service and the CPSC the authority to detain shipments of toys containing paint or magnets without independent safety certification – just like the Food and Drug Administration temporarily detained Chinese seafood – and hold them until testing of a random sample demonstrates that they are safe.

Provide the CPSC with the Power and Resources it Needs: To deter even large companies from marketing dangerous products, Edwards will increase the maximum civil fine to $100 million. He will give CPSC authority to act far more quickly, rather than giving manufacturers 30 days notice while children's safety is at stake. Finally, he will double resources for the CPSC.

Keeping Food Safe

Americans now eat an average of 260 pounds of imported foods a year, but the FDA inspects only 0.7 percent of imported food products. China recently admitted that 180 food processing facilities had been caught putting industrial additives into food. [Boston Globe, 5/9/07; CDC, 2007; AP, 4/16/07]

Require Country-of-Origin Labels: Large meat packers, agribusiness lobbyists and retailers like Wal-Mart have blocked implementation of country-of-origin labeling requirements. Edwards will finally enforce mandatory country-of-origin labeling, giving Americans an informed choice and giving other countries an incentive to improve their food safety systems. [USDA, 2007; The Hill, 4/7/05; National Family Farm Coalition, 2007]

Integrate Food Safety Rules and Enforcement: Fifteen different agencies regulate some part of our food supply, enforcing 35 different laws. Different agencies regulate meat lasagna and vegetable lasagna. Edwards will give one regulatory body clear responsibility for food safety and give the FDA the resources to scale up inspections. [National Academy of Sciences, 1998; GAO, 2007; CSPI, 2007; Government Executive, 6/19/07]

Give the FDA Mandatory Recall Powers: Neither the Agriculture Department nor the FDA can order mandatory recalls of the food products they inspect. The agencies are not even equipped to monitor how well companies carry out voluntary recalls. Edwards will establish the power to order mandatory recalls and make it illegal for companies to sell recalled products. [GAO, 2007]

Require Safety Systems Abroad: Edwards will require countries exporting food to the U.S. to have safety systems certified by the FDA as equivalent to our own. This added protection will supplement, not replace, inspections by U.S. officials.

Ensuring Safe Drug Imports

American drug companies now get up to 80 percent of their ingredients from foreign manufacturers, but the FDA inspects only about 7 percent of these foreign businesses. Recent investigations by journalists and the GAO revealed grave lapses in America's drug import safety system. [New York Times, 10/31/07; Washington Post, 11/1/07; GAO, 2007]

Put Permanent Inspectors in Importing Countries: Edwards will station permanent FDA inspectors in all countries with significant imports, starting with China and India. The agency's foreign offices will have inspectors able to conduct spot inspections without notice and regularly inspect manufacturers even after drugs are approved, as they are in the United States. They will also have necessary language skills or translators on staff.

Demand Safety on Chinese Exports: China allows chemical manufacturers to sell drug ingredients without even minimal standards, a regulatory gap that led to the poisoned toothpaste and cold medicine that killed hundreds in Panama and Haiti. Edwards will demand that China regulate all companies that sell pharmaceutical ingredients. [New York Times, 10/31/07]

Prevent Counterfeit Medicines: Americans face a one-in-100 chance of buying tampered or fake goods each time they go to the drugstore. Big drug companies have lobbied and litigated to prevent enforcement of the drug safety law passed in 1988. John Edwards will require the pharmaceutical industry to quickly implement non-forgeable electronic "track-and-trace pedigrees" and enforce laws requiring sellers to prove that their drugs came from an authorized distributor. [Washington Post, 6/17/07]

John Edwards, Edwards Campaign Press Release - Edwards Unveils Detailed Proposals To Stop Imports Of Dangerous Foods, Toys And Medicines Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/294196

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