Thinknews
Feb 03, 2026

SCOTUS Case Over Pesticides Sets Stage for Fight With ‘MAHA Moms’

A group of mothers and wellness influencers, including Casey Means, who is nominated to be the surgeon general, went to the White House last week and spoke about their “concerns” heading into the midterms. Many of them voiced their complaints about the health risks of weedkillers.

According to Alex Clark, a “Make America Healthy Again” influencer who was there, it turned into a two-hour meeting in a “jam-packed” room with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, and the president himself.

“They just let us talk — they let us get everything off of our chest,” said Clark, who hosts “Culture Apothecary,” a MAHA-themed podcast produced by Turning Point USA.

Clark and the “MAHA moms” in the room had a lot to say. Glyphosate, a common weedkiller, was at the top of people’s minds. There were calls to cut back on its use and look into how safe it is.

On Monday, the US Supreme Court will hear arguments in a case that could settle a long-running fight over whether one of the most popular weedkillers in the US is safe. This case serves as a test of how much power the Make America Healthy Again movement can really have in Washington.

People can keep suing Bayer, the company that makes Roundup (the brand name for glyphosate), for illnesses they say its product caused.

But regardless of the outcome of the case, which is expected to be decided in June, the issue of limiting pesticides has been a significant concern among MAHA members for a long time.

Hundreds of protesters are expected to gather in front of the court before the arguments begin. More than 30 speakers will encourage people to push for more pesticide protections.

In 2014, DeWayne “Lee” Johnson, a school groundskeeper in San Francisco, was told he had terminal non-Hodgkin lymphoma. He was only 42 years old. He had been spraying the herbicide Roundup on the grounds he had taken care of for years. Once, when a sprayer he used broke, he got soaked in the liquid. After that, he started to get rashes and sores all over his body.

Johnson won a historic $289 million settlement from Monsanto, the company that makes Roundup, in 2018. The company was found to be responsible for his diagnosis.

RFK Jr., an environmental lawyer in California at the time, was the man who helped him win.

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