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Obama Wars Title: The First Food Nazi's next invasion: restaurants WASHINGTON After wrapping her arms around the retail giant Wal-Mart and trying to cajole food makers into producing nutrition labels that are easier to understand, Michelle Obama, the first lady and a healthy-eating advocate, has her sights set on a new target: the nations restaurants. A team of advisers to Mrs. Obama has been holding private talks over the past year with the National Restaurant Association, a trade group, in a bid to get restaurants to adopt her goals of smaller portions and childrens meals that include healthy offerings like carrots, apple slices and milk instead of French fries and soda, according to White House and industry officials. The discussions are preliminary, and participants say they are nowhere near an agreement like the one Mrs. Obama announced recently with Wal-Mart to lower prices on fruits and vegetables and to reduce the amount of fat, sugar and salt in its foods. But they reveal how assertively she is working to prod the industry to sign on to her agenda. On Tuesday, Mrs. Obama will begin a three-day publicity blitz to spotlight Lets Move!, her campaign to reduce childhood obesity, which was announced one year ago this week. She will introduce a public service announcement, appear on the Today show and deliver a speech in Atlanta promoting gardening and healthy-eating programs. But as she uses her public platform to persuade children to eat healthier and exercise more, Mrs. Obama and her team are also quietly pressing the levers of industry and government. Over the past year she has become involved in many aspects of the nations dietary habits, exerting her influence over nutrition policy. Her team has worked with beverage makers to design soda cans with calorie counts and is deeply involved in a major remake of the governments most recognizable tool for delivering its healthy-eating message: the food pyramid. Mrs. Obama persuaded Congress to require schools to include more fruits and vegetables in the lunches they offer, and she encouraged lawmakers to require restaurants to print nutrition information on menus, a provision that wound up in President Obamas landmark health care law. They really want a cooperative relationship with the food industry, and theyre looking at industry to come up with ideas, said Lanette R. Kovachi, corporate dietitian for Subway, the nations second-largest restaurant chain in terms of revenue. She said she had taken part in at least four conference calls with Mrs. Obamas food advisers. But in seeking partnerships with industry, Mrs. Obama runs a risk. While nutritionists and public health advocates give her high marks for putting healthy eating on the national agenda, many worry that she will be co-opted by companies rushing to embrace her without offering meaningful change. Can the food industry play a responsible role in the obesity epidemic? The answer isnt no, said Dr. David Ludwig, the director of the Optimal Weight for Life program at Childrens Hospital in Boston. The point is that the best initiatives can be subverted for special interest, and its important to be vigilant when we form partnerships with industry. White House officials say Mrs. Obama has believed from the start that bringing industry to the negotiating table is critical to achieving her long-range goal of eliminating childhood obesity within a generation. Melody Barnes, Mr. Obamas domestic policy adviser and the chairwoman of a presidential task force on obesity, said industry has been eager to work with the White House. But Mrs. Obama does not lend her name to any plan or program, she said, unless it meets the recommendations of a task force report issued in May. If someone wants her support, we take a hard look at the data and the research to determine if the commitment meets our standards, Ms. Barnes said. And if the result is good for business as well as for the health of American children, we see that as a win-win. Still, Mrs. Obama has been treading carefully. As part of her anti-obesity campaign, she has called on food makers to design clear front-of-package labels to warn consumers about ingredients like salt, sugar and fat. But after months of negotiations with the White House, the companies insisted on a plan that would also spotlight healthy ingredients, like calcium or fiber. The administration thought the new labels confusing, and they do not meet recommendations in a recent report by experts at the nonpartisan Institute of Medicine. When the food companies announced the plan, the White House put out a tepid statement calling it a significant first step. Mrs. Obama said nothing. She could have just added this to her list of things done, but she said, Not good enough, said Dr. David Kessler, a commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration under President Bill Clinton It was not done in a confrontational manner; she didnt blast them, but she sent a very clear signal that it didnt meet the mark. That, however, did not stop food industry executives from invoking Mrs. Obamas name when they rolled out the labeling initiative last month and said they were responding to her call for action. Mrs. Obamas approach to the new labels contrasts starkly with her embrace of Wal-Marts plan to reformulate foods and lower prices on fruits and vegetables a plan that carried political risks of its own. The conservative pundit Rush Limbaugh maintained that Mrs. Obama had somehow bullied or pressured the company, while liberals complained that she given her imprimatur to a company that her husband once criticized for its labor practices. Mrs. Obamas approach to the new labels contrasts starkly with her embrace of Wal-Marts plan to reformulate foods and lower prices on fruits and vegetables a plan that carried political risks of its own. The conservative pundit Rush Limbaugh maintained that Mrs. Obama had somehow bullied or pressured the company, while liberals complained that she given her imprimatur to a company that her husband once criticized for its labor practices.
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