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Protein Politics: The New Dietary Guidelines and the Same Old Incentives

The new 2025–2030 Dietary Guidelines have literally flipped the Food Pyramid on its head. They represent the most substantial revision in decades, replacing low-fat orthodoxy with an emphasis on high-quality protein, full-fat dairy, and whole foods amid public skepticism of federal health leadership under Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

The stakes are high: 6 in 10 adults have at least one chronic disease, and 4 in 10 have two or more, driving trillions in health costs and lost productivity. Public choice dynamics have historically distorted federal guidance, and early signs indicate regulators remain intertwined with the industries they oversee. Without structural separation between regulatory authority and concentrated interests, the hope is simply that today’s special interests are at least more aligned with metabolic health than those that guided policy before. (RELATED: When Washington Decides What’s for Dinner)

The inverted food pyramid that is endorsed in the 2026 U.S. “Eat Real Food” campaign (U.S. Government/Wikimedia Commons)

The federal government formally entered the dietary guidance business with the 1977 Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs’ report, Dietary Goals for the United States. This report established the low-fat paradigm that shaped policy beginning in 1980 when the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued the first Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Congress codified that authority in the National Nutrition Monitoring and Related Research Act of 1990, requiring updates every five years. Since 1980, the guidelines have been revised ten times, reflecting evolving scientific consensus and political negotiation. (RELATED: ‘Where’s the Beef?’)

The most significant shift in 2025 is the break from the low-fat orthodoxy that dominated guidance from the 1980s through the early 2000s.

The most significant shift in 2025 is the break from the low-fat orthodoxy that dominated guidance from the 1980s through the early 2000s. Earlier editions stressed limiting total and saturated fat, promoting low-fat or fat-free dairy, and discouraging red meat. The new framework prioritizes nutrient-dense, high-quality protein, affirms full-fat dairy, recognizes lean red meat as a recommended protein source, and places greater emphasis on reducing ultra-processed foods and added sugars. While the 2020–2025 guidelines capped added sugars at less than 10 percent of daily calories, the new edition strengthens restrictions on processed foods and reorients dietary patterns toward whole-food protein sources.

Federal nutrition guidance is embedded in statute, not merely advisory, and therefore reshapes supply chains and determines what reaches millions of Americans’ plates. The guidelines govern the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs (NSLP) under the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010; in 2024, the NSLP alone served 21.4 million students and accounted for 72.5 percent of public-school lunches. The 2024 Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) supported an average of 42.1 million participants per month, with benefits averaging $187.20 per recipient. Military dining, VA facilities, and federal hospitals also align with these standards, so when the guidelines change, billions in procurement contracts move with them.

Beyond procurement, the new guidance will redirect demand across agricultural and food processing markets. U.S. food and beverage manufacturing shipments exceed $900 billion annually, so even minor shifts in institutional purchasing move billions in contracts. Meat and dairy generate more than $450 billion in wages, and recognizing lean red meat and full-fat dairy as recommended proteins will expand their role in federal meal programs. Meanwhile, ultra-processed foods account for roughly 55 percent of U.S. caloric intake, putting manufacturers concentrated in refined grains and processed snacks under pressure; PepsiCo’s reformulation of Doritos to remove artificial colors and flavors signals broader adjustment.

The political economy of the guidelines is unavoidable. When federal standards determine school meal reimbursement and set benchmarks for SNAP retailers, producers have clear incentives to shape the rules. Firms bear upfront costs to influence advisory language but secure long-term returns once procurement standards lock in demand. Trade associations such as the National Dairy Council, the American Beverage Association, and commodity groups for corn, soy, and meat have long submitted comments and funded research cited in deliberations. A 2015 JAMA Internal Medicine study found that the sugar industry funded 1960s research that minimized sugar’s cardiovascular risks, underscoring how concentrated interests can shape scientific narratives.

Concerns about conflicts between regulators and industry have persisted for decades. Multiple members of the USDA Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee had financial ties to McDonald’s, Coca-Cola, the Sugar Association, the American Meat Institute, confectionery firms, and egg and dairy boards, a 2026 study found. Joanna Dwyer, a later committee member, previously worked for Procter & Gamble, promoting Duncan Hines and Crisco. An analysis of the 2020 committee found that 95 percent of members reported conflicts with food or pharmaceutical companies, with repeated ties to firms including Kellogg, Abbott, Kraft, Mead Johnson, General Mills, Dannon, and the International Life Sciences Institute. These patterns reflect structural incentives for firms whose revenues depend on how federal nutrition standards are written.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the current HHS and USDA leadership have not insulated the 2025 guidelines from industry influence. Despite emphasizing systematic reviews and transparency under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, advisory panels remain dominated by academics whose institutions receive industry funding. Of nine review authors in this cycle, at least seven have ties to the food industry, including funding or compensation from the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, Texas Beef Council, General Mills, National Dairy Council, and National Pork Board. Personnel have changed, but the incentives linking regulators and industry persist.

This entanglement is institutional. Federal nutrition guidance shapes consumption while health care costs are largely socialized through Medicare, Medicaid, and employer-sponsored insurance, which financed $4.5 trillion, 18 percent of GDP, in 2024. When diet-related costs are spread across taxpayers and insurance pools, cost discipline weakens. If standards are even marginally influenced by concentrated interests, the gap between health outcomes and economic incentives remains.

If the 2025 guidelines truly break with past orthodoxy, they present a rare chance to redirect a nation burdened by chronic, diet-related disease that strains households and public budgets alike. Yet shifting macronutrient emphasis is not the same as reforming governance. As long as nutrition policy remains intertwined with procurement mandates, agricultural subsidies, and a health system that socializes trillions in annual costs, public choice pressures will endure. Whether this administration can meaningfully improve American health depends less on rhetoric than on disentangling regulators from concentrated industry interests; without structural reform, even promising dietary shifts risk repeating the political economy that has shaped the American diet for decades.

READ MORE from Julia Cartwright:

When Washington Decides What’s for Dinner

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