Articles
President Trump Delivers on MAHA Push
The White House
July 14, 2025
President Donald J. Trump took office promising to confront the chronic health crisis plaguing Americans - and six months later, he is delivering on that promise by removing harmful chemicals from our food supply.
Today, the Trump Administration announced that dozens of ice cream companies - representing more than 90% of the ice cream volume sold in the U.S. - have pledged to eliminate the use of certified artificial colors in their ice cream and frozen dairy products.
They join a growing group of leading companies that have taken steps to improve the food supply:
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Steak & Shake moved to 100% all-natural beef tallow and replaced its "buttery blend," which contained seed oils, with 100% Grade A Wisconsin butter.
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McCormick announced it will drop certain food dyes from its products.
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PepsiCo announced it will remove artificial ingredients from popular food items - including Lay's and Tostitos chips - by the end of the year.
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In-N-Out announced it will remove synthetic food dyes and artificial flavors from its menu items, and also transitioned to 100% beef tallow.
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Tyson Foods eliminated synthetic dyes in its food products.
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Mars removed titanium dioxide from its Skittles product.
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Sam's Club committed to removing 40 harmful ingredients - including artificial colors, additives, dyes, and high-fructose corn syrup - from its private-label products.
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Kraft-Heinz announced it will remove artificial dyes from its U.S. products.
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General Mills announced it will remove artificial dyes from its U.S. cereals and all foods served in K-12 schools.
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Nestlé announced it will remove all petroleum-based food dyes from its food and beverage products.
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Conagra Foods announced it will remove certain color additives from its frozen products, no longer offer products with artificial dyes in K-12 schools, and stop using artificial dyes in the manufacturing of its products.
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JM Smucker announced it will remove synthetic colors from its consumer food products.
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Hershey announced it will remove synthetic dyes from its snacks.
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Consumer Brands announced it will urge its members to remove artificial colors in food and beverage products served in schools.