Joint
Statement from Congressmen Ron Paul (R-TX) and Peter DeFazio (D-OR)
submitted to the House Committee on Government Reform: "Six
Years After the Enactment of DSHEA: The Status of National and
International Dietary Supplement Regulation and Research."
Mr. Chairman,
we appreciate the opportunity to submit comments regarding the
need to protect consumers from intrusive regulations which interfere
with the availability of dietary supplements. Today’s hearing
is just the latest example of the leadership you have shown on
this important issue.
Over the
past decade the American people have made it clear that they do
not want the federal government to interfere with their access
to dietary supplements. In 1994, Congress responded to the American
people’s desire for greater access to the truth about the benefits
of dietary supplements by passing the Dietary Supplements and
Health and Education Act of 1994 (DSHEA), which liberalized the
rules regarding the regulation of dietary supplements. Congressional
offices received a record number of comments in favor of DSHEA.
Despite DSHEA,
officials of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) continued
to attempt to enforce regulations aimed at keeping the American
public in the dark about the benefits of dietary supplements.
However, in the case of Pearson v. Shalala, 154 F.3d 650 (DC Cir.
1999), reh’g denied en banc, 172 F.3d 72 (DC Cir. 1999), the United
States Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit Court reaffirmed consumers’
first amendment right to learn about how using dietary supplements
can improve their health without unnecessary interference from
the FDA. The FDA has been forced to revise its regulations in
order to comply with Pearson. However, members of Congress have
had to intervene with the FDA on several occasions to ensure that
they followed the court’s order. Clearly Congress must continue
to monitor the FDA’s action in this area.
The freedom
of consumers to use, or even obtain truthful information about,
dietary supplements could also be threatened by the United States
participation in the Codex Alimentarius Commission (Codex). Codex
is a part of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations and the World Health Organization Food Standard Program
operating under the authority of the Sanitary Phytosanitary Agreement
and the Technical Barriers to Trade Agreement.
Codex is
the vehicle through which the World Trade Organization (WTO) is
working to "harmonize" (e.g., conform) food and safety
regulations of WTO member countries. Codex is currently creating
a guideline on the proper regulations for dietary supplements
with the participation of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
We are concerned that the end result of this process will force
the United States to adopt the same strict regulations of dietary
supplements common in European countries such as Germany, where
consumers’ cannot even examine a bottle of dietary supplements
without a pharmacists permission. By participating in this process,
the FDA is ignoring the will of Congress as expressed in DSHEA
and in the FDA Modernization Act of 1997, which expressly forbid
the FDA from participating in the harmonization process, as well
as the will of the American people.
While Codex
has no direct authority to force Americans to adopt stringent
regulations of dietary supplements, we are concerned that the
United States may be forced to adopt Codex standards as a result
of the United States’ status as a member of the WTO. According
to an August 1999 report of the Congressional Research Service,
"As a member of the WTO, the United States does commit to
act in accordance with the rules of the multilateral body. It
[the US] is legally obligated to ensure national laws do not conflict
with WTO rules." Thus, Congress may have a legal obligation
to again change American laws and regulations to conform with
WTO rules!
If
Congress were to refuse to "harmonize" US laws according
to strict Codex/WTO guidelines, a WTO "dispute resolution
panel" could find that the United States is engaging in unfair
trade because of our failure to "harmonize" our regulations
with the rest of the world. In
any such trade dispute, the scales are tipped in favor of countries
using the Codex standards because of WTO rules presuming that
a nation who has adopted Codex has not erected an unfair trade
barrier.
Therefore,
in a dispute with a country that has adopted the Codex standards
it is highly probable that America would lose and be subject to
heavy sanctions unless Congress harmonized our laws with the other
WTO countries. Harmonization may be beneficial for the large corporations
and international bureaucrats that control the WTO but it would
be a disaster for American consumers of dietary supplements!