Pigs, Dogs, and Nicholas Kristof
On Saturday, New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote an essay condemning the "Save Our Bacon Act," which passed the House and is currently pending before the Senate as part of the Farm Bill. Save Our Bacon would pre-empt state laws like California's Proposition 12, which establishes minimal welfare standards for the raising of pigs whose body parts are sold in the state. In National Pork Producers Council (NPPC) v. Ross (2023), the Supreme Court upheld Prop 12 against a dormant commerce clause challenge. However, a ruling either for or against a dormant commerce clause claim sets the boundaries of what states may do only absent congressional action (i.e., while the congressional power to regulate interstate commerce lies dormant). Thus, Congress has the power to supersede NPPC and allow nationwide what Prop 12 banned in California: the sale of pork products from pigs who were born to sows confined to gestation crates in which they lack the space even to turn ...