| Source: truth-out.org
 
 The state of Washington has accused  opponents of a ballot initiative that would label groceries containing  genetically engineered ingredients of hiding their donors in a campaign  that has seen a flood of out of state money from big corporations such  as Monsanto.
 On Wednesday, Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson filed a  lawsuit alleging that the Grocery Manufacturers Association violated the  state’s campaign finance laws by failing to disclose the sources of its  $7.2 million in contributions to No on 522, the main group campaigning  against the labeling initiative.   Washington’s Initiative 522 would require groceries containing  genetically engineered ingredients and genetically engineered seed  stocks to be labeled as such. Genetically engineered foods are also  called Genetically Modified Organisms, or GMOs.   The Grocery Manufacturers Association is a trade group that  represents more than 300 food and beverage companies, including Pepsico,  Coca-Cola and Kraft, which joined big biotech firms in donating millions to defeat a similar GMO labeling initiative in California last year.   Ferguson is asking a state court for a temporary restraining order to  force the trade association to reveal the identities of the donor  companies it has shielded from the public eye before voters go to the  polls in November.   Evidence Reveals Effort to Hide Donors   Two months after California voters rejected a GMO labeling initiative  last year, the Grocery Manufacturers Association directed its employees  to "scope out a funding mechanism to address the GMO issue . . . while  better shielding individual companies from attack for providing  funding," according to evidence cited in the attorney general’s  complaint.   Support for the California labeling initiative dropped dramatically after $46 million in donations from companies such as Dupont, Monsanto and Pepsico flooded the campaign, and California voters rejected GMO labeling by a narrow margin last November.   In February, Grocery Manufacturers Association CEO Pamela Bailey  issued a memo to establish a "Defense of Brand Strategic Account" to  raise money from member companies to oppose Initiative 522 while only  reporting the trade association’s name to state campaign finance  authorities, according to the complaint.   In a statement, the Grocery Manufacturers Association said it is  reviewing its actions and relevant state laws and will "continue to  cooperate with state authorities to fully resolve the issue as promptly as possible."   In a statement, the Yes on 522 campaign demanded that their opponents  drop their anti-labeling advertisements until their donors are made  public. No on 522 did not respond to an inquiry from Truthout by the  time this article was posted.   Monsanto and Friends vs. Natural and Organics Companies   The battle over GMO labeling in Washington features many of the same  agribusiness and natural products companies that compete in supermarkets  and butted heads over the California initiative last year.   The No on 522 campaign has raised $17 million total so far and has come under fire for taking millions in donations from powerful out-of-state corporations  in the GMO and pesticide business. Of those companies that have come  clean on their contributions, the biotech giant Monsanto has donated  $4.8 million, and Dupont has donated $3.2 million, while Bayer  CropScience and Dow Agrosciences each gave $591,654, according to  Truthout’s review of state records.   The Yes on 522 campaign has raised almost $5.6 million from organic  consumer groups, anti-GMO groups, alternative health firms and organics  companies such as Nutiva, Natures Path Foods and Annie’s Inc. Dr.  Bronner’s Magic Soaps tops the list with $1.8 million in contributions  to Yes on 522.   Six other campaign committees are also supporting Initiative 522 in Washington.   Last month, 66 percent of Washington voters polled said they would "definitively" or "probably" vote for the GMO labeling initiative. 	   	  	  	    Copyright, Truthout.  |