<\/a>Maybe you\u2019ve been following the long-simmering controversy about labeling food products for GMOs (genetically modified organisms)<\/a>. If you haven\u2019t, now is a good time to pay attention because one of the world\u2019s largest food conglomerates\u2014that would be Campbell\u2019s\u2014has just thrown a new twist into the GMO pot. In fact, Campbell\u2019s recently announced turnaround might just prove to be the watershed moment the anti-GMO movement and vocal consumers have been hoping for.<\/p>\n Campbell\u2019s, a long-time opponent of GMO labeling, is breaking ranks with its biotech and agribusiness cronies and the powerful Grocery Manufacturing Association (GMA) to become the first major food company to label its entire line of products for genetically engineered ingredients. (That portfolio includes Campbell\u2019s iconic soups, Pepperidge Farm cookies and snacks, Vlasic pickles, V-8 beverages, Prego pasta sauces, Swanson broths, and more).<\/p>\n Campbell\u2019s new policy is in answer to consumers\u2019 demands for transparency and reflects the economic realities of the impending enforcement of the first state-labeling law to take effect this summer in Vermont. To put it bluntly, it looks like Campbell\u2019s is conceding defeat in the fight to establish mandatory labeling of GMOs.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s how Campbell\u2019s CEO Denise Morrison\u2019s dropped the bombshell <\/a>on January 17th:<\/p>\n Today, consistent with our purpose, we announced our support for mandatory national labeling of products that may contain genetically modified organisms (GMO) and proposed that the federal government provide a national standard for non-GMO claims made on food packaging.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Campbell\u2019s announcement must have sent shockwaves through the industrial food complex because up to this year the company had been marching in lock step with the powerful anti\u2013GMO-labeling lobby. That group was composed of a who\u2019s who of America\u2019s food giants\u2014corporate titans like PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, Nestle, General Mills, Hershey, Kellogg, Land O\u2019Lakes, Del Monte, Cargill, ConAgra, Ocean Spray, and Smuckers.<\/p>\n Along with Campbell\u2019s announcement backing a federal mandate for labeling came a second bombshell: that the company would \u201cwithdraw from all efforts led by coalitions and groups opposing such measures.\u201d It was as recent as 2012 that Campbell\u2019s deposited $265,000 into the anti-labeling lobby\u2019s war chest. That pile of cash eventually tallied up to the mighty sum of $46 million, which America\u2019s corporate giants sank into the campaign to defeat Proposition 37 in California (the first salvo in the fight to defeat state-mandated labeling of foods for GMO ingredients). And although Campbell\u2019s contribution was a drop in the bowl compared to Monsanto\u2019s more than $4 million and DuPont\u2019s more than $3 million, the new year\u2019s turnaround by Campbell\u2019s could be a game changer.<\/p>\n Remember that the corporate bullies won the first battle in 2012, when California voters narrowly defeated Prop 37. Where California failed, however, Vermont, Connecticut, and Maine succeeded. In May 2014, Vermont\u2019s Governor Peter Shumlin signed into law Act 120<\/a>, one of the country\u2019s first mandatory, GMO-labeling laws. Act 120, which becomes enforceable as of July 2016, requires that all foods offered for sale in Vermont must be labeled for GMOs if the food is \u201centirely or partially produced with genetic engineering.\u201d<\/p>\n It looks like tiny Vermont sounded the alarm on the future of GMO-labeling and one corporate food giant finally is listening.<\/p>\n Addressing the question of why the sudden turnaround: Here\u2019s Campbell\u2019s Morrison again:<\/p>\n We are operating with a \u201cconsumer first\u201d mindset. We put the consumer at the center of everything we do. . . . GMO has evolved to be a top consumer food issue reaching a critical mass of 92% of consumers in favor of putting it on the label.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n