The “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) movement, strongly aligned with the Trump administration, is facing tensions with its Republican allies over pesticides and toxic chemicals. MAHA-aligned groups and influencers are raising alarms about provisions in a House appropriations bill they say will shield pesticide and chemical manufacturers from accountability, ultimately making Americans less healthy. A draft of the administration’s “MAHA report” reportedly omits any calls to prevent pesticide exposure, disappointing advocates.
Conservatives have traditionally sided with big business, supporting fewer regulations on potentially toxic substances. Kennedy and his disciples, meanwhile, espouse stricter environmental protections while also bucking mainstream science on vaccine safety. Disparities on chemicals and pesticides within their coalition put Republicans in the middle: Do they side with big business or health concerns? On many issues, business interests appear to be winning.
A forthcoming iteration of the Trump administration’s MAHA positions does not call for new restrictions on pesticides and describes existing procedures as “robust.” MAHA-aligned activists recoiled, stating that the MAHA draft report stating that the EPA’s pesticide review process is “robust” is the biggest joke in American history.
A Republican-authored House Appropriations bill seeks to block pesticide labels that go beyond what the EPA uses based on its current human health risk assessment. Critics say such a move could prevent the use of updated science on pesticide labels. MAHA activists have slammed both provisions, saying in a letter to President Trump that GOP support for the measures is “unconscionable.”
While the pesticide issues have generated some sparks between MAHA and MAGA, the administration has taken several other actions to reduce restrictions on the chemical industry more broadly.