Hinson’s “Save Our Bacon Act”: What the Bill Really Does
And Why Both Sides Are Talking Past Each Other
When Rep. Ashley Hinson talks about the Save Our Bacon Act, she describes it as legislation to protect Iowa pork producers from burdensome regulations imposed by other states. Many critics describe it as legislation designed to help China and large factory farms while rolling back animal welfare protections. Neither description fully explains the bill.
At its core, the legislation is about a long-running constitutional conflict over states’ rights, interstate commerce, and who gets to decide the standards for products sold within a state’s borders.
The background
The dispute began after California voters approved Proposition 12, requiring that pork, eggs, and veal sold in California come from animals raised under minimum space and housing standards. Even if those animals were raised in another state.
California argues that consumers should be able to decide what standards products sold within their state must meet. Many Iowa pork producers argued California was effectively regulating farms located hundreds or thousands of miles away.
In 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court largely upheld Proposition 12, concluding that the Constitution did not automatically prevent California from imposing those sales standards.
The Save Our Bacon Act is Congress’s response to that ruling.
What the bill would do
The legislation would prohibit states from restricting the sale of livestock products based on how animals were raised in another state if those products otherwise comply with federal law.
Supporters argue this would restore a truly national agricultural marketplace and prevent one state from dictating production standards nationwide.
Opponents argue it would override hundreds of state laws dealing not only with animal welfare but potentially livestock disease control, food safety, import restrictions, and other state regulatory authority.
A legislative analysis prepared by Harvard Law School’s Brooks McCormick Jr. Animal Law & Policy Program concluded that the bill’s language could affect hundreds of existing state laws beyond California’s Proposition 12 and create years of legal uncertainty.
Why supporters favor it
For many Iowa farmers, this is fundamentally an economic issue. California represents a major market for pork producers. And meeting California’s housing requirements would often require expensive facility modifications that many producers believe should not be imposed by another state.
Supporters argue that Iowa farmers should follow Iowa law, not California law. Interstate commerce requires consistent national rules. Different state production standards increase costs and reduce market efficiency. And Congress has the authority to prevent states from regulating production practices beyond their borders.
These arguments explain why Hinson and many agricultural organizations frame the legislation as protecting family farmers and preserving a national food supply.
Why critics oppose it
Animal welfare organizations view the legislation very differently.
California’s Proposition 12 and similar laws were approved by voters who believed farm animals should receive more humane treatment. Critics argue the Save Our Bacon Act would erase those voter-approved protections by preventing states from deciding what products may be sold within their own borders.
Harvard researchers also warn that the legislation’s wording could have consequences extending well beyond animal housing standards, potentially affecting state laws involving livestock disease prevention, food safety requirements, import restrictions, and other areas traditionally regulated by states.
The constitutional tension
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the debate is that both political parties are invoking principles they do not always emphasize elsewhere.
Republicans generally advocate for states’ rights, yet this bill would preempt certain state laws enacted by voters.
Democrats often support stronger federal regulation in many policy areas but defend California’s authority to establish its own standards in this case.
The debate therefore is not simply about pork production. It is about where the balance should be drawn between state sovereignty and Congress’s constitutional authority to regulate interstate commerce.
Why the issue matters beyond Iowa
For Iowa, the nation’s leading pork-producing state, the legislation could significantly affect producers that sell into California and other large markets.
But its implications extend well beyond agriculture. If Congress can prohibit one category of state production standards, similar arguments could eventually arise involving environmental standards, labor practices, food labeling, or other product requirements adopted by individual states.
The question is no longer simply whether California can regulate pork. It is whether states should retain broad authority to establish standards for products sold within their borders, or whether Congress should establish one national rule for everyone.
Our Take
Much of the public discussion surrounding the Save Our Bacon Act has generated more heat than light.
Supporters often portray it as simply standing up for Iowa farmers. Critics often portray it solely as an attack on animal welfare. Both descriptions overlook the larger constitutional question.
This legislation asks who should decide the rules governing products sold within a state’s borders: the individual states or Congress. It also asks whether voter-approved state standards should give way to a single national marketplace.
Reasonable people can disagree on those questions. What is important is that the debate be about the impact of the bill. Not political slogans suggesting it is either a simple victory for farmers or merely a gift to industrial agriculture.
Understanding the constitutional tradeoffs is far more valuable than choosing sides based on the bill’s name.
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