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Corngate



Corngate was a political scandal which took place in New Zealand in 2002 and involved the suspected release of genetically modified corn seed in 2000. The possibility of the presence of a small percentage of GE corn in a seed shipment from the U.S. was raised publicly by Nicky Hager in his book Seeds of Distrust. The percentage was found well after sowing to be above "allowable limits" of contamination - the allowable limit being zero as the question of the accidental presence of GE content or the unreliability of low level testing had not been considered.

It became politically important due to the New Zealand Green Party stance on GE crops. The ruling Labour Party policy regarding GE Research was brought into the argument allowing Corngate to become an election issue as the book, Seeds of Distrust was released a few months prior to the 2002 Parliamentary elections.

A Select committee, including members of the Green Party, was formed to investigate the matter. Green Party statements claim the committee was "obstructed" by Syngenta refusing to release test results.[1] The final report, released in late 2004, was divided along party lines.

The scandal was further intensified when news anchor John Campbell interviewed NZ Prime Minister Helen Clark about the issue. It ended with Clark labelling Campbell a 'little creep' due to what she considered the ambush style of the interview.

The name comes from the Watergate scandal in U.S. Politics. It has become popular in New Zealand journalism to suffix any politically or significantly embarrassing event with "-gate", such as "Paintergate" or "Powdergate", in keeping with the US journalistic licence that led to the term of "Monicagate".

References

  1. ^ Notes on the select committee's 'Corngate' report (2007-10-19). Retrieved on 2007-11-27.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Corngate". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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