In 2018, California residents voted by ballot measure to ban the sale of pig products that come from producers that use gestation crates, individual crates the size of an adult pig’s body that mother pigs are confined to 24⁄7 for the full gestation of their pregnancies, unable to turn around. In response, the pork industry sued and the case made its way to the nation’s highest court.
If the Supreme Court had not upheld Prop 12, years of advocacy efforts would have been nullified and advocates would no longer be able to pursue state-level legislative interventions that improve welfare by banning the sale of particularly cruelly produced animal products. It would have been a tremendous setback for the US animal welfare movement. Instead, today is a huge victory.
Groups like HSUS spearheaded efforts to uphold Prop 12, even in the face of massive opposition. The case exemplified the extent to which even left-leaning politicians side with animal industry over animal welfare, as even the Biden administration sided with the pork industry.
Today is a monumental moment for farmed animal advocacy. Congratulations to everyone who worked to make this happen!
Read more about it:
Summary and analysis from Lewis Bollard (Senior Program Officer for Farm Animal Welfare at Open Phil) here on Twitter.
Victory announcement by the Humane Society of the United States here.
US Supreme Court Upholds Prop 12!
The United States Supreme Court just released its decision on the country’s most pivotal farmed animal welfare case—NATIONAL PORK PRODUCERS COUNCIL ET AL. v. ROSS, SECRETARY OF THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE, ET AL. —upholding California’s Prop 12, the strongest piece of farmed animal legislation in the US.
In 2018, California residents voted by ballot measure to ban the sale of pig products that come from producers that use gestation crates, individual crates the size of an adult pig’s body that mother pigs are confined to 24⁄7 for the full gestation of their pregnancies, unable to turn around. In response, the pork industry sued and the case made its way to the nation’s highest court.
If the Supreme Court had not upheld Prop 12, years of advocacy efforts would have been nullified and advocates would no longer be able to pursue state-level legislative interventions that improve welfare by banning the sale of particularly cruelly produced animal products. It would have been a tremendous setback for the US animal welfare movement. Instead, today is a huge victory.
Groups like HSUS spearheaded efforts to uphold Prop 12, even in the face of massive opposition. The case exemplified the extent to which even left-leaning politicians side with animal industry over animal welfare, as even the Biden administration sided with the pork industry.
Today is a monumental moment for farmed animal advocacy. Congratulations to everyone who worked to make this happen!
Read more about it:
Summary and analysis from Lewis Bollard (Senior Program Officer for Farm Animal Welfare at Open Phil) here on Twitter.
Victory announcement by the Humane Society of the United States here.
New York Times coverage here.