NPR

Powerful Food Lobby Group Loses Members Amid Industry Culture Clash

Eight large companies have left the Grocery Manufacturers Association, weakening the influential lobbying group. Some companies have dropped out in an effort to shed the industry's "junk food" image.
Contradictory consumer demands for food labels are making some food companies re-think their alliance with the industry's traditional lobbying group.

For at least the past decade, the Grocery Manufacturers Association (GMA) has been the unrivaled voice of a vast industry, from neighborhood grocery stores to food manufacturing giants with supply chains that span the globe. Most recently, it's been a powerful force in fighting proposals to require information about added sugar or GMOs on food labels.

Today, that colossus is teetering and facing on the news site . One industry insider says that he's seen a list of another three companies that are considering leaving the association.

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