Lawsuit Challenges Florida Lab-Grown Meat Ban
The ban was "enacted with the express purpose of insulating Florida agricultural businesses from innovative, out-of-state competition," according to the suit.

In May, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a bill banning the sale or cultivation of lab-grown meat in the state. The ban was explicitly framed as an effort to stave off potential competition for Florida livestock producers.
"We must protect our incredible farmers and the integrity of American agriculture," Florida Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson said in a May press release. "Lab-grown meat is a disgraceful attempt to undermine our proud traditions and prosperity, and is in direct opposition to authentic agriculture."
However, a lawsuit filed Tuesday on behalf of lab-grown meat producer UPSIDE Foods seeks to challenge this ban, arguing that it violates preexisting federal regulations.
"UPSIDE doesn't want to force anyone to eat cultivated meat," the suit reads. "But it does want the opportunity to distribute its product to willing consumers, so that those consumers can decide for themselves whether UPSIDE's product is worth eating."
According to the lawsuit, which was brought forth by the public-interest law firm Institute for Justice (I.J.), the ban violates two federal laws, the Federal Meat Inspection Act (FMIA) and the Poultry Products Inspection Act (PPIA). Both laws prohibit states from placing "ingredient requirements" other than those prescribed in the law. They also bar states from making any other rules "with respect to premises, facilities and operations of any establishment at which inspection is provided under" the FMIA or the PPIA.
To I.J., this means Florida's ban violates the Constitution's "Supremacy Clause because it is expressly preempted by federal laws regulating meat and poultry products," the suit reads, adding that the law was "enacted with the express purpose of insulating Florida agricultural businesses from innovative, out-of-state competition like UPSIDE."
Florida's ban was explicitly written to protect Florida meat producers from possible competition from lab-grown meat producers. While not every consumer wants slaughter-free meat, those interested in trying meat alternatives should be free to do so.
"The ban was enacted after intense lobbying by cattle interests, and its anticompetitive purpose is no secret. For example, Florida's Commissioner of Agriculture, who is a farmer, openly praised the ban for protecting the state's cattle industry, and Gov. DeSantis announced the signing from behind a podium bearing a sign that read 'Save Our Beef,'" a Tuesday press release from I.J. reads. "But protecting in-state agricultural interests from innovative out-of-state competition is not a legitimate use of government power. Indeed, a major reason for adopting the U.S. Constitution was to ensure a national common market."
Laws like Florida's stifle innovation and competition in the guise of "protecting" consumers. The only issue is that no one needs to be protected by products like UPSIDE's. Instead of letting consumers decide whether lab-grown meat succeeds or fails, DeSantis and his allies are attempting—unconstitutionally, according to I.J.—to determine the result.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Those damn politicians interfering with the market and trying to dictate to consumers what they can and cannot buy! They are tyrannical authoritarian socialist dictators!
...wait, what? The law was sponsored by DeSantis?
..ahem...
Thank heavens for real patriots like DeSantis who is standing up for the real American farmers and stopping this synthetic socialist "Science-y" monstrosity from invading our kitchen tables and our CHILDREN!
Principals, not principles.
Federalism in action.
Ass POTUS, DeSatan will be forcing USA taxpayers to trick and ferry billions upon brazilians of sub-Brazilians from Brazil to Botswana, and to deport illegal sub-Martians from Mars to Uranus! Ass long ass the illegal Martians SUFFER-SUFFER-SUFFER, red-meat-hungry socons and troglodytes will be DELIGHTED to spend those extra tax dollars! Butt I for one think that illegal Martians are intelligent beings, too, and hope that they will NOT suffer on Uranus, from too many foul odors, etc.!
DeSatan… SPEAKS to me! Get Thee behind me, DeSatan!
Scienfoology Song… GAWD = Government Almighty’s Wrath Delivers
DeSatan loves me, This I know,
For DeSatan tells me so,
Little ones to GAWD belong,
We are weak, but GAWD is strong!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
DeSatan loves me, yes indeed,
Makes the illegal sub-humans bleed,
Protects me for geeks and freaks,
I LOVE to pay taxes, till my wallet squeaks!
PUNISH Disney, I’ll PAY for their pains,
Ass long ass DeSatan Blesses our gains!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
DeSatan expels the low-lifes to Venus,
Moves them ANYWHERE, with His Penis!
His Penis throbs with His Righteousness,
Take no heed, He says, of His Frighteousness!
ALL must be PUNISHED, they say!
So never, EVER be or say gay!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
Our USA taxes must PAY The Way, He may say,
To EXPORT the illegal Mars aliens, every day!
To Pluto, Jupiter, or Uranus, they must ALL go!
Oh, the places that the low-lifes will go, you must know!
The taxes we shall pay? Through the money, we must BLOW!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
Yes, DeSatan loves me!
DeSatan tells me so!
(If we did NOT do-doo, doo-doo-doo, ALL of this, then that them thar illegal Mars aliens WILL show up on OUR doors, in the formerly pure USA!!! We MUST keep them AWAY, far away, out in the Deep Dark Yonder!)
#MeInTheAss’CauseI’maGullibleLowBrowBlowHardConTard
#BeenTrumpledUnderfootForFarTooLong
DeSatan tis of Thee,
Sweet Man of tyranny!
From every mountainside,
You can smell Him for free!
DeLand where de eagles glide!
DeLand where de illegals hide!
DeSatan, tis of Thee I sing,
To the liberals, tears You bring!
You make the proggies cry!
Talk with THEM?! Don’t even try!
DeSatan, tis of Thee I praise!
For the woke, Holy Hell You raise!
Illegal Martians? Low-life scum, You catch and send,
To Uranus with them! Ignore tax dollars You spend!
We must punish ALL, who to USA might sail,
At ALL costs, DeSatanism MUST prevail!
There is a perfectly reasonable argument for banning lab-grown meat on purely environmental grounds. Unless that is, you're doctrinaire libertarian, which I'm told Reason is not, so have at it.
Will eating lab grown meat make me look orange?
Farrowing crate regulations are good because the only thing they're protecting is the pigs. There are no companies or industries dedicated to the eradication of animal product and meat consumption that such laws would unfairly benefit or be protective of.
But, of course, this is Reason and Emma Camp and we all pretend like we were born yesterday and the other 500 thumbs on the scales of the market are immaterial relative to *this* thumb... against a future product... that is significantly less onerous and far reaching than (m)any of the other thumbs.
It was a bad and intentionally anti-competitive law that should never have been passed. However, I'm not sure what legal basis there is for challenging it. There's certainly no constitutional basis for overturning this state law. The complaint hangs entirely on the argument that it's discrimination against out-of-state companies. The companies could defeat that tactic by moving to Florida - where their product would be equally illegal.
Not every bad idea is unconstitutional.
Even the supremacy clause is flawed coming from this rag (which in principle says the feds have no authority to use their supremacy).
Isn't space technology a huge business in Florida? Betcha an astronaut flying to Mars might want a nice piece of meat now and then, rather than a tube of food paste. They going to let them bring a cow? But, if rockets take off from Florida without a decent menu, maybe they can fly out of some other state. BTW, we should ban light bulbs because it's not real fire, like a candle.
... Do you actually think they're going to set up an entire meat lab on Mars including all precursors or did you just not think that one through?
He’s a (Gell-Mann) tar baby. He’s not making a real argument he’s just here to be retarded so that people as, if not more, stupid than him (or he’s pretending to be) get stuck to him and people smarter than him still have to struggle to avoid the tar trap and work doubly hard to clean themselves and anyone the may help out.
If he’d said “An astronaut flying to Mars might want to bring along a few human skulls to practice phrenology in his downtime.” everyone would just plainly recognize that he’s retarded and avoid him but, in the article Gell-Mann, context, everyone just forgets that we already have jerky, other forms of dried meat, and powdered protein packaged, sold, and consumed by the megaton every day all around the world and that the idea of accommodating an astronaut’s palette with lab-grown meat in such a fashion is like sending up phrenology materials or the entire Disney catalog on the original celluloid for them to "enjoy".
To I.J., this means Florida's ban violates the Constitution's "Supremacy Clause because it is expressly preempted by federal laws regulating meat and poultry products," the suit reads, adding that the law was "enacted with the express purpose of insulating Florida agricultural businesses from innovative, out-of-state competition like UPSIDE."
California already got SCOTUS to say this is fine.
Jeb Bush could revive his Presidential prospects by proposing a Florida statute banning Soylent chicken Chick-fil-A and lab grown alligator
>>While not every consumer wants slaughter-free meat, those interested in trying meat alternatives should be free to do so.
free to get their fmeat and abortions in Georgia
Abortions and lab grown meat in Georgia. Little American flags and Porterhouse steak in Florida.
I say let the invisible hand decide. I'm not eating that shit even if the market tries to shove it down my throat.
Problem is, as Reason *loves* to elide, just like electric cars, CFL bulbs, and Social Media (and COVID and the vaccine) there's a heaping helping of Government Funding and startup money (foreign and domestic) behind these projects before they even show up on regulatory radar.
Again, this is Emma Camp, Reason, and Mass Media. Just because she fell off the lab-grown turnip truck yesterday doesn't mean you have to acquiesce to or even abide their stupidity.
Doesn't IJ have better things to do? No? Carry on.
"federal laws regulating meat and poultry products"
*ARE* the Constitutional violation.
There's no enumerated power for "Food and Drug regulation".
While not every consumer wants slaughter-free meat, those interested in trying meat alternatives should be free to do so.
Wait wait - is it meat, or is it a meat alternative? Make up your mind.
Honestly though, this could be easily resolved by just being truthful, candid, and above-board on every aspect of this subject.
Like produce. You go to the grocery store, there is a very clear distinction between "Produce" and "Organic Produce." So the people can see the distinction and make their choice accordingly.
Why not just do the same thing here.
A very clear sign that says "Natural Meat" and one that says "Lab Grown Meat" (and, for that matter, "Plant-Based Meat Substitute").
It's the obfuscation between these things that is objectionable - the effort to pass one off as the other.
The reason they object to this, however, is because they know the terms "Lab Grown Meat" and "Meat Substitute" aren't exactly marketing gold. Which should really tell you something about the product itself, if it has to be deceptive about what it is in order to convince people to try it.
You are reminding me of the episode of "South Park" where the main characters manage to get the government to require that all veal be accurately labeled as "tortured baby cow." This results in the entire country having a de facto veal ban, as no one wants to eat it anymore. Even with labeling regular meat, there is a lot of marketing involved. I think that if food, especially meat was actually labeled so consumers were fully aware of how it was made, traditional meat producers would likely suffer far more than makers of lab-grown meat and plant-based proteins.
Perhaps.
But at least it'd all be above board, and consumers would be making informed decisions.
It’s the obfuscation between these things that is objectionable – the effort to pass one off as the other.
Similar with DeSantis’ law. It bans the sale of meat pending judgement or guidance from the FL Department of Agriculture and relegates the regulatory authority, up to and including a ban, to them. This is, roughly, in line with other libertarian positions that Reason would cheer as the Governor granted explicit authority for them to regulate rather than the unelected agency just assuming they had it.
Which, the world over, is standard fare even for non-lab products. You can’t just bring Asian Carp into Florida, dump them in the nearest body of water, and charge people $5 a fish to catch/kill/eat them.
Just because Emma’s idea of “lab grown meat” constitutes people in white lab coats growing steaks in beakers doesn’t mean that’s what will actually be done.
While not every consumer wants slaughter-free meat, those interested in trying meat alternatives should be free to do so.
The end.
The Florida Act is indefensible, and had it been promoted by a Democratic governor, many posters here would be roundly condemning it.