[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 7]
[House]
[Pages 9136-9137]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




            AMERICANS DESERVE TO KNOW WHO RAISED THEIR FOOD

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Kentucky (Mr. Massie) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. MASSIE. Mr. Speaker, Americans want to know: Where does their 
food come from? Parents want to know before they give it to their 
children: How was this food raised? Where did it come from? Moms want 
to know, dads want to know, and today they can; but if proposed 
legislation passes this body this week, we won't have that information 
necessary to make those decisions for our family and our family's 
health.
  What legislation am I talking about? I am talking about the country 
of origin labeling. In other words, right now, if you buy food and it 
comes from a foreign country, it must be labeled. If you buy pork, you 
buy beef, you buy chicken, wouldn't you want to know where that food 
came from?
  Why would you want to know? Well, different countries have different 
rules and different cultures. If you remember back in 2007, we had some 
pet food that came from a foreign country that killed a lot of pets. It 
was enhanced with melamine to up the protein readings in it, and it was 
unsafe for pets. A lot of pets died as a result. Well, it came from a 
different country that has different ethics. I think Americans deserve 
to know who raised their food, which country did it come from. But the 
legislation that is in front of us this week will repeal that 
requirement to label beef, poultry, and pork.
  Now, why are we doing this? Why are we in such a rush? Because we 
have been told that the World Trade Organization requires it.
  What is the World Trade Organization, and who are they to tell 
Congress what laws we have to pass? These judges weren't appointed by 
the President. They weren't confirmed by the Senate. These are not 
judges from our Constitution. These are extra-constitutional judges, 
yet they are telling us here in Congress you have got to do this or 
there will be repercussions.
  I think our Founding Fathers would be appalled at this notion, that 
we have given up our sovereignty. I don't accept the premise that we 
have to make laws here based on what some world court agrees to, but I 
suppose somebody made a trade agreement in some Congress previous that 
bound us to decisions of this court.
  Now, even if you accept the premise that we have to abide by the 
World Trade Organization, and because they have ruled that we can no 
longer label pork and beef as from foreign countries to inform our 
consumers, then you have got to ask the question: Why did we add 
chicken to this bill? The World Trade Organization is silent on the 
subject of chicken, yet it is in the bill.
  We are going to remove the labeling requirements for chicken. I think 
it is a bad idea. I think it is probably motivated by some large meat 
packing companies; but they are represented here in Congress, and the 
American consumer and small livestock farmers are not.

                              {time}  1100

  I proposed voluntary country of origin labeling last night in the 
Rules Committee. I had an amendment. It said: Okay. Maybe we shouldn't 
mandate. Maybe we shouldn't force the foreigners to label their meat 
when it comes into the country; but how about voluntarily letting 
American producers put that proud stamp and know that it is the seal of 
approval that most consumers want so they know that beef, that pork, 
was raised in this country?
  I was shot down in the Rules Committee. It was just a voluntary 
program. In fact, it was proposed 10 years ago by this Speaker of the 
House, by the former chair of the Ag Committee, by the current chair of 
the Ag Committee, and by the current chair of the Rules Committee; yet 
they wouldn't allow my amendment for a vote in the Rules Committee. All 
I sought to do was let American farmers proclaim that their beef is 
raised in the United States.
  Today, Mr. Speaker, that is why I am here. I am here today to say 
that we need to assert our sovereignty, the sovereignty of this body. 
We all took an oath to the Constitution. We didn't take an oath to the 
World Trade Organization. We need to assert our sovereignty, and we 
need to uphold our commitment to the Americans who sent us here.
  I urge my colleagues to vote ``no'' on the repeal of the country of 
origin labeling bill later today.

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