Food Politics

by Marion Nestle
Jan 15 2026

The MAHA Dietary Guidelines VI. Some Concluding Thoughts.

Let’s start with what I like about the 2020-2030 Dietary Guidelines and New Pyramid, taken together.

Eat Real Food

It’s how I eat, and prefer to eat.

It’s consistent with Michael Pollan’s Eat food.  Not too much.  Mostly plants.

Pollan’s version, to which I subscribe, is supported by at least three of the guidelines:

  • Eat vegetables & fruits throughout the day
  • Focus on whole grains
  • Limit highly processed foods, added sugars, & refined carbohydrates

The New Pyramid

It’s bright and cheerful.

It illustrates a basic nutrition message: eat a wide variety of foods from all food groups.

It’s possible to eat healthfully following this diagram if eating a wide variety of foods and balancing calories.

It’s consistent with food movement objectives, and is bringing attention to these objectives.

What’s missing and I wish were included

  • Eat Real Food as the first dietary guideline
  • Greater emphasis on plant sources of protein
  • Inclusion of whole grain foods in the “eat more” part of the pyramid
  • Policy support

The need for policy

Much about these guidelines and food guides connects with long-desired objectives for a food system aimed at promoting the health of people and the planet.  As I noted in an earlier post, these guidelines focus explicitly on personal responsibility, not system change.

To create a food system that supports eating according to these guidelines and pyramid, we need:

  • Agricultural subsidies: for foods for people (not feed for animals or fuel for automobiles, as the current system does)
  • School food: kitchens and cooks in every school, gardens wherever possible, and enough money to pay for real food
  • Education: cooking classes for kids and adults, men as well as women
  • Equity: enough money to buy real food, and the space, equipment, and time to prepare it

I will have more to say about all this as time goes on, so stay tuned.

Jan 14 2026

The MAHA Dietary Guidelines V. The Alcohol Non-Recommendation

The Dietary Guidelines for America 2025-2030 simply say “Limit alcoholic beverages: Consume less alcohol for better
overall health.”  They go on to specify who should not drink alcohol.

People who should completely avoid alcohol include pregnant women, people who are recovering from alcohol use disorder or are unable to control the amount they drink, and people taking medications or with medical conditions that can interact with alcohol. For those with a family history of alcoholism, be mindful of alcohol consumption and associated addictive behaviors.

This guideline

  • Does not specify what is meat by “limit” or “less.”
  • Does not mention cancer as a risk of alcohol consumption.

These are big issues.  Excessive alcohol intake poses problems for society as well as for individuals: car accidents and gun violence, for example.

From a public health perspective, the lower the overall level of alcohol consumption in a population, the fewer the health and societal problems it causes.  The overall message always should be: drink as little alcohol as possible.

This message is complicated by evidence, highly contested, that low levels of alcohol might reduce risks for heart disease and overall mortality.  Even if correct, advice about alcohol would need to balance the purported benefits for heart disease against risks for cancer, particularly breast cancer.

The Biden-era 2025 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee did not discuss alcohol because the agencies were waiting for the results of commissioned reports on alcohol and health.  As it happened, three reports came out just after the DGAC submitted its report late in 2025.

Even so, the take-home lesson from all of these reports is that less alcohol is better.

At issue is how much less.

As I’ve explained previously, the dietary guidelines have long stated that 2 drinks a day for men and 1 for women (because women metabolize alcohol differently) is a safe amount.

The omission of these limits is difficult to interpret.  Do these guidelines consider those limits too low or too high?

At the press conference, Mehmet Oz said:

Alcohol is a social lubricant that brings people together. In the best-case scenario, I don’t think you should drink alcohol, but it does allow people an excuse to bond and socialize, and there’s probably nothing healthier than having a good time with friends in a safe way..You look at the Blue Zones, for example, around the world, where people live the longest. Alcohol is sometimes part of their diet…Again, small amounts. There is alcohol on these dietary guidelines, but the implication is don’t have it for breakfast.

Yes, but what is a “small amount?”  And what about cancer risk?  Shouldn’t people be warned?

As Roni Rabin put it:

Though there is robust debate within the medical community as to the relationship between moderate drinking and various forms of cardiovascular disease, there is more scientific certainty about the link between alcohol and at least seven types of cancer. Warnings about alcohol increasing the risk of breast cancer were included in the dietary guidelines 25 years ago. Former Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy last year called for putting cancer warning labels on alcoholic beverages, similar to those for cigarettes.

The alcohol industry works unceasingly to convince everyone that alcohol poses no health risks.  Unfortunately, it does.

Yes, consume less, but how much less?  The guidelines leave this up to you to decide.

I see these dietary guidelines as a big win for the alcohol industry.

No wonder it supports them so enthusiastically: Distilled Spirits, Beer & Wine Associations Support New Health and Human Services 2025-2030 ‘Dietary Guidelines for Americans’

Moderation?  Whatever you think it means.

Jan 13 2026

The MAHA Dietary Guidelines IV: Eat more meat!

The Eat Real Food Website says “We are ending the war on protein. Every meal must prioritize high-quality, nutrient-dense protein from both animal and plant sources….” But here’s what comes up first and is clearly the first priority.

And here’s an exultant RFK Jr on X:

Protein is well understood to be a euphemism for meat.  I’ve already written about how most people already eat twice the protein needed so advice to eat more of it is unlikely to do anyone any good.

And the document, Daily Servings by Calorie Level, makes it clear that you have to eat meat if you are going to reach the level of protein intake recommended.  For this, I am indebted to Kevin Klatt, who posted this on X.

What’s wrong with recommending more meat?

  • It’s healthier getting protein from plant sources.
  • The way we produce meat pollutes the environment with pesticides and herbicides to grow their feed.
  • It also presents major food safety hazards (see Eric Schlosser’s update on Fast Food Nation)
  • Cattle burp methane and are the single largest food source of greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Beef cattle are raised in CAFOs under crowded and dirty conditions.
  • The meat industry exploits workers.
  • Consolidation in the meat industry keeps prices high (Tyson’s just agreed to an $82.5M settlement in a beef price-fixing lawsuit)
  • Producing meat the way we do is not sustainable and adds to inequities.

Of course, sustainability and equity are non-topics for this administration.  But they matter and should very much be on the table for discussion.

We already eat plenty of meat—more than 100 pounds per capita per year of red meat alone (according to USDA).  We don’t need to be eating more.

Correction

In my first post on these dietary guidelines, I said:

Some of the instructions don’t make sense: “Consume meat with no or limited added sugars?”  Who does this?

Several readers wrote to object.  Renata M, for example, said she could think of so many examples, she just had to say something.

  • BBQ sauce
  • Ketchup
  • Teriyaki sauce
  • Other popular “Chinese” foods
  • Brown sugar-glazed pork chops
  • Pasta sauce
  • Sloppy Joe’s
  • Brines and marinades
  • and more, if honey and maple syrup are considered added sugars [they are]

Oops. Sorry about that.  Thanks!

Jan 12 2026

Columbia University Epidemiology Grand Rounds

Register for this here.

Jan 12 2026

The MAHA Dietary Guidelines III: Conflicts of Interest

On Mondays, I typically post something about industry-funded research or investigator conflicts of interest.

In the light of Robert F. Kennedy’s complaints about conflicts of interest in previous dietary guidelines advisory committees, it is startling to observe the industry ties reported by members of this administration’s committee.

These conflicted interests are also surprising in light of the high prioritization of meat in these guidelines, which advise eating protein (a commonly understood euphemism for meat) in every meal, and high-fat dairy.

The committee’s membership and disclosures are given on pages ix-xviii of the Scientific Foundation report.

To focus just on ties to meat and dairy groups, members report financial ties to

  • Global Dairy Platform
  • Nutricia/Danone
  • National Cattlemen’s Beef Association
  • Texas Beef Council
  • American Dairy Science Association
  • National Dairy Council
  • National Pork Board
  • California Dairy Innovation Center
  • Fonterra Limited
  • California Dairy Research Foundation
  • Dairy Management Inc

This was reported originally in Stat News (which quotes me elsewhere in the story).

It’s unclear how the Trump administration appointed its group of nutrition scientists and other researchers. A scientific report linked at the bottom of a new federal website, RealFood.gov, says only they were chosen through “a federal contracting process based on demonstrated expertise.”

Merrill Goozner quickly picked up the story on his GoozNews substack ( <gooznews@substack.com>): “Advisors to new nutrition guidelines rife with conflicts of interest”

So a tip of the hat to RFK, Jr. for fully disclosing that information. But put a dunce cap on his hypocritical head for allowing onto the review panel six reviewers with financial ties to corporate interests with a direct stake in the outcome of the guidelines. There is no evidence that this committee, two-thirds of whom have ties to industry, received vetting under the Federal Advisory Committee Act of 1948.

The New York Times story points out the hypocrisy (I’m also quoted later in this one):

Soon after Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was sworn in as the nation’s health secretary, he promised to overhaul the federal nutrition guidelines. A key step, he said, would be to “toss out the people who were writing the guidelines with conflicts of interest.”

His own panel, he said, would “have no conflicts of interest.” But the new guidelines, which were released Wednesday and emphasize protein, meat, cheese and milk, were informed by a panel of experts with several ties to the meat and dairy industries.

The Times quotes Mark Kennedy, the senior vice president of legal affairs for the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, which supports plant-based diets and has filed a complaint with the government saying it should withdraw the guidelines.

Disclosing conflicts of interest at the end of the process “isn’t really going to cut it..Because if nobody ever had a chance to weigh in, and nobody other than the government behind closed doors had a way to assess it, there’s no way to ensure there’s fair balance.” (Mr. Kennedy is not related to the health secretary.)

Comment

In reading through press accounts, I’m pretty sure I saw one where one of the committee members reporting financial ties tossed it off with some comment about how he was sticking to the science and that’s all that mattered (I’ve searched but can’t find it now).

I heard that a lot after publication of my book, Unsavory Truth: How Food Companies Skew the Science of What We Eat.  In that book, I review research on the “funding effect,” the strong correlations between who pays for food and nutrition research and its outcome.  Industry-funded research tends to produce results favorable to the funder’s interests (otherwise it wouldn’t be funded).  But recipients of funding typically did not intend to be influenced and do not recognize the influence.  It is not surprising that this committee—unlike many other scientific committees over the past decades—came to precisely the conclusions decided in advance by Secretaries Kennedy and Rollins.

Jan 9 2026

The MAHA Dietary Guidelines II: Personal Responsibility vs. Public Health Policy

This is the second in a series of posts I will be writing about the new Dietary Guidelines for America, 2025-2030.

Yesterday, I gave an overview of the guidelines, finding them cheerful, but muddled, contradictory, ideological, and retro.

I do like the cheerful message: Eat Real Food.

But after reviewing lsome of the rest of the materials that come with the guidelines, I think those terms miss a more important concern: they are about personal responsibility, not public health.

This is most explicit from the Eat Real Food Website.

Our nation is finding its footing again, moving past decades of unhealthy eating and rebuilding a food culture rooted in health, science, transparency, and personal responsibility.

In March, I posted a a comment about a statement made by USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins.

Secretary [of HHS] Kennedy and I have a powerful, complementary role in this, and it starts with updating federal dietary guidance. We will make certain the 2025-2030 Guidelines are based on sound science, not political science. Gone are the days where leftist ideologies guide public policy.

I could not imagine how anyone could think the dietary guidelines reflected leftist ideology and guessed that she must have been talking about plant- as opposed to meat-based diets.  I wasn’t entirely wrong.  Eating meat is the first priority of the guidelines, a matter I will discuss next week.

But now I think she must have meant personal responsibility as opposed to public health policy.

This approach leaves it entirely up to you to make healthful food choices, never mind that if you try to eat healthfully, you are fighting the entire food system on your own.

The goal of food companies—even those selling real food—is to get you to buy as much of it as possible, regardless of how their products affect your health or that of the planet.

Given this administration’s destruction of the public health system in America, you really are on your own.

The groups in America who eat most healthfully are educated; have decent jobs, money, and resources; have homes with functioning kitchens; can cook; live in safe neighborhoods with grocery stores; and have access to affordable health care.  That’s what public health is about.

If the government leaves it to you to “do your own research” and fight the food system on your own, it is saying it has no responsibility for creating a food environment that can help you eat and enjoy real food.

It’s all on you.

The eat-real-food message is cheery and for sure it’s how I eat, at least most of the time.  I will have more to say about it next week too.

But the focus on personal responsibility troubles me.  Shouldn’t all of us be able to eat as healthfully as possible?

The Fact Sheet rejects health equity out of hand, but then says:

We reject this logic: a common-sense, science-driven document is essential to begin a conversation about how our culture and food procurement programs must change to enable Americans to access affordable, healthy, real food.

Isn’t that what health equity is about?  For that we need policy backed by resources.  Personal responsibility won’t work without it.

Jan 8 2026

The MAHA 2025-2030 Dietary Guidelines have arrived: Cheerful, Muddled, Contradictory, Ideological, Retro

The new Dietary Guidelines  [The guidelines are in bold; my summary follows]

  • Eat the right amount for you: balance calories
  • Prioritize protein foods at every meal: prioritize animal sources
  • Consume dairy: prioritize full-fat
  • Eat vegetables & fruits throughout the day: eat more, but not as much as previously recommended
  • Incorporate healthy fats: prioritize animal fats
  • Focus on whole grains: prioritize, but eat less than previously recommended
  • Limit highly processed foods, added sugars, & refined carbohydrates: eat less
  • Limit alcoholic beverages

These were released along with a fact sheet, scientific report, and interactive website.  I’ve summarized the details below in a table comparing these guidelines to the previous version.

Why muddled?  The lists of guidelines differ among the various documents.  The prioritization of protein is hard to understand; most Americans already eat plenty.  Some of the instructions don’t make sense: “Consume meat with no or limited added sugars?”  Who does this?

Why contradictory?  If you increase the amount of protein, meat, and full-fat dairy in your diet, you will not be able to keep your saturated fat intake below 10% of calories, and will have a harder time maintaining calorie balance (fat has twice the calories of protein or carbohydrate).  If you want to increase the amount of fiber in your diet, you need to prioritize vegetables, fruits, and whole grains, not meat and dairy.

Why ideological? The fats recommended as sources of essential fatty acids—olive oil, butter, and beef tallow—have little or no essential linoleic or alpha-linolenic acids. For those, seed oils (not mentioned in these guidelines) are much better sources.  The prioritization of animal-based as opposed to plant-based is inconsistent with research on diet and health.  USDA Secretary Rollins said these guidelines would no longer reflect leftist ideology.  The fact sheet and website make the ideology explicit.

Why retro?  Except for the excellent advice to reduce intake of highly processed foods, which were not particularly prevalent back then, these guidelines take us back to the diets of the 1950s when everyone was eating lots of meat and dairy and not worrying much about vegetables, and heart disease was rampant.  I’m all for eating whole foods but these guidelines dismiss 75 years of research favoring diets higher in plant foods.   

Bottom line:  A mixed bag.  These guidelines are big wins for the meat, dairy, and alcohol industries (alas).  The loser: ultra-processed foods (yes!).  The recommendation to reduce highly processed foods (a euphemism for ultra-processed) is the one great strength of these recommendations.  Following that advice might help Make America Healthy Again.  But the rest must be viewed more as ideology than science, and also must be interpreted in the light of  this administration’s destruction of what was once a reasonably effective public health service (CDC, FDA, NIH) and system.  Eating more meat and fat is unlikely to help people resist measles and other illnesses preventable by vaccination.

I will have more to say about the specific recommendations in subsequent posts.  In the meantime, here’s my quick summary.

Dietary Guidelines: 2020-2025 vs. 2025-2030

RECOMMENDATION 2020-2025 2025-2030 CHANGE?
       
Number of pages 149 10  
Calories Measure by weight status Eat the right amount Same
Water Choose Choose Same, but stronger
Protein 56 g/2000 kcal [based on 0.8 g/kg]

 

Prioritize at every meal. [ 84 to 112g/2000 kcal, based on 1.2 -1.6 g/kg] Increase
Dairy 3 cups/day 3 servings Same
Vegetables 2.5 cups/day 3 servings/day Decrease
Fruits 2 cups/day 2 servings/day Decrease
Fats 27 grams/day oils Healthy Prioritize animal sources
Saturated fat <10% calories <10% calories Same
Grains 6 ounces, >3 whole/day 2-4 servings/day Decrease, prioritize whole
Processed foods other than meat Not mentioned Limit, avoid Major improvement
Added sugars Eat less Limit, avoid Stronger
Sodium <2300 mg/day <2300 mg/day Same
Alcohol <2 drink/d for men; 1 for women Limit, consume less Weaker
Eat more Vegetables, Fruits, Legumes, Whole grains, Low- Or Non-Fat Dairy, Lean Meats, Poultry, Seafood, Nuts, Unsaturated Vegetable Oils Animal-source foods, full-fat dairy, vegetables, fruits, healthy fats, butter, beef tallow, whole grains  
Eat less Red and Processed Meats, Sugar-Sweetened Foods and Beverages, Refined Grains, Alcohol Added sugars, refined grains, chemical additives, fruit and vegetable juices, highly processed foods and beverages, sodium, alcohol  
Dietary sustainability Not mentioned Not mentioned  Same, alas

I will be writing about the details in subsequent posts.  Stay tuned.

Resources

Jan 8 2026

Keeping up with AI and food

While waiting for the new dietary guidelines to be released today (I will write about them tomorrow), here’s a place-holder.

Artificial intelligence is taking over everything and food is no exception.  Here’s my latest collection of items about the design of AI technology ostensibly to improve foods and beverages, as well as human health.

FOODS AND BEVERAGES 

HUMAN NUTRITION AND HEALTH