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Tuesday, September 17, 2024

Rep. Crane: VP Harris' red meat guideline restriction 'a disgraceful afront to our founding principles'

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U.S. Rep. Eli Crane (R-Ariz.), left, and Vice President Kamala Harris | House.gov / WhiteHouse.gov

U.S. Rep. Eli Crane (R-Ariz.), left, and Vice President Kamala Harris | House.gov / WhiteHouse.gov

U.S. Rep. Eli Crane (R-Ariz.) said said Vice President Kamala Harris' move to restrict red meat consumption in the government dietary guidelines was an "unprecedented overreach is a disgraceful afront to our founding principles."

“This type of unprecedented overreach is a disgraceful afront to our founding principles," Crane told Yavapai News. "The government has no place dictating the dietary decisions of Americans based off radical and twisted climate ideology."

"Governmental decrees like this would be painfully detrimental to Arizona’s ranchers, which, in turn, would dramatically impact both our way of life and our economic potential," he said.

Vice President Kamala Harris (D) said she would change the government dietary guidelines to reduce Americans’ consumption of red meat. Such a move would impact Arizona’s agriculture and economy, with almost all of the agricultural land in the state dedicated to cattle grazing.

Harris’ comments came during a 2019 CNN town hall meeting while Harris was a candidate for U.S. President.

"Would you support changing the dietary guidelines, the food pyramid, to reduce red meat specifically?" CNN's Erin Burnett asked.

“Yes, I would,” Harris answered.

Harris ended her presidential campaign before a single Democratic primary took place in the 2020 election, before being selected as President Joe Biden’s running mate.

Changing government dietary guidelines to encourage less beef consumption would impact the economy in Arizona, which is home to 19,000 farms and ranches that produce $6.73 million in cash receipts annually, according to the Arizona Beef Council.

Grazing land makes up 73% of Arizona’s total land area and about 98% of Arizona’s total agricultural land, according to a 2014 report by The University of Arizona, and the state saw more than $800 million in cattle and calf sales in 2011.

Prior to being Vice President, Harris represented California for a partial term in the U.S. Senate. She was previously the state’s attorney general. 

She was endorsed by President Biden for president after Biden announced he was stepping down from the campaign earlier this week.

If elected, she would be the first Indian-American person to hold the office of U.S. President. 

Scheller Maehling has worked with the Arizona Beef Council since 2010, becoming the executive director in 2017. She earned her bachelor's degree from California Polytechnic State University-San Luis Obispo.

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