Bonnie Powell, who covers the ethics and politics of foodover at the marvelous blog Ethicurean, says:
Obama still hasn’t named a Secretary of Agriculture, which is one of the most important appointments in the Cabinet, overseeing a $94 billion budget that directly affects not just farmers, but public health, the environment, animal welfare, and so much more. For years this post has been held by shills for “Big Farma” and pandered to those corporations like Cargill, Smithfield, Monsanto, and Archer Daniels Midland with massive lobbying clout. As Nicholas Kristof wrote in his NY Times column “Obama’s Secretary of Food?”, appointing a reformer to head the USDA would send a “powerful signal” that U.S. food policy was finally about to become more palatable.
Kristof linked to a petition at fooddemocracynow.org that asks Obama’s transition team to consider six candidates – all experienced, viable names of people who are ready and willing to serve – for Secretary of Agriculture who could potentially mend our broken food system. Already, after only six days, 36,000 people have signed the petition, including Michael Pollan, Alice Waters, and Bill Niman, and the Obama transition team appears to be paying attention. But for some reason, the current names still being floated in the media are not those of reformers at all.
Dave Murphy, a sixth-generation Iowan and the petition’s organizer, tells me that he thinks if we can get the number of signers to 100,000 over the next few days, the pressure to choose someone from the sustainable agriculture and food community – not Big Farma – would be too immense to ignore.
Please consider signing the petition, blogging it, and/or forwarding this message to your personal networks and any list-servs you are on. Visit fooddemocracynow.org now to sign.
Sign this Ag Sec petition: It’s worth a shot (Ethicurean)