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Vegan food company files First Amendment lawsuit against Oklahoma over labeling regulations

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According to the Institute for Justice, the new law is unconstitutional and it will treat plant-based meat alternatives similar to that of dangerous products such as cigarettes and alcohol.

ANN SCHMIDT: A vegan food company has filed a First Amendment lawsuit against Oklahoma over the state’s new law regulating labels of plant-based food products. On Wednesday, Chicago-based Upton’s Naturals announced the lawsuit, saying the company is working with the Plant Based Foods Association (PBFA) and the Institute for Justice.

The lawsuit follows the passage of the Oklahoma Meat Consumer Protection Act, which says that plant-based foods must have disclaimers on their packaging that are “as large and prominent as the product’s name stating that the food is plant-based,” according to a PBFA press release. The new law is set to take effect on Nov. 1 of this year.

According to the Institute for Justice, the new regulation is a “compelled-speech requirement,” which is unconstitutional and that “would have a devastating effect on companies like Upton’s Naturals.” In fact, the organization argues that the new law will treat plant-based meat alternatives similar to that of more dangerous products such as cigarettes and alcohol.

“Oklahoma’s law has nothing to do with protecting consumers and everything to do with protecting the meat industry from honest competition,” the Institute for Justice said on its website. “No reasonable consumer who buys Upton’s Naturals’ foods thinks they’re buying animal meat.” “Our labels make it perfectly clear that our food is 100 percent vegan,” Daniel Staackmann, the founder of Upton’s Naturals said in a statement.  SOURCE…

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