Difference between revisions of "Fiona Nash"

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'''Fiona Nash''' is Australian Assistant Health Minister and a member of the [[National Party of Australia]]. In February 2014 her chief of staff [[Alastair Furnival]] was forced to resign following revelations of his involvement in a company lobbying for food companies. <ref name="Herald"> Mike Daube, [http://www.smh.com.au/comment/nash-fails-in-smoking-alcohol-and-now-food-labelling-20140216-32ttr.html#ixzz2tXckfJoN Nash fails in smoking, alcohol and now food labelling], ''Sydney Morning Herald'', 17 February 2014 </ref>
 
'''Fiona Nash''' is Australian Assistant Health Minister and a member of the [[National Party of Australia]]. In February 2014 her chief of staff [[Alastair Furnival]] was forced to resign following revelations of his involvement in a company lobbying for food companies. <ref name="Herald"> Mike Daube, [http://www.smh.com.au/comment/nash-fails-in-smoking-alcohol-and-now-food-labelling-20140216-32ttr.html#ixzz2tXckfJoN Nash fails in smoking, alcohol and now food labelling], ''Sydney Morning Herald'', 17 February 2014 </ref>
  
The controversy arose after it emerged that Nash had decided unilaterally that a food labelling ratings website should be taken down the same day it was launched. The food industry has long opposed such 'traffic light' systems.
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The controversy arose after it emerged that Nash had decided unilaterally that a new healthy food star rating website should be pulled down the same day it was launched. The site had been in development for two years had been approved by state and territory food ministers. The food industry has long opposed such 'traffic light' systems.
  
 
In the words of one critic:  
 
In the words of one critic:  

Revision as of 02:34, 17 February 2014

Fiona Nash is Australian Assistant Health Minister and a member of the National Party of Australia. In February 2014 her chief of staff Alastair Furnival was forced to resign following revelations of his involvement in a company lobbying for food companies. [1]

The controversy arose after it emerged that Nash had decided unilaterally that a new healthy food star rating website should be pulled down the same day it was launched. The site had been in development for two years had been approved by state and territory food ministers. The food industry has long opposed such 'traffic light' systems.

In the words of one critic:

'..the true scandal is that a person responsible for improving the health of the nation seems to sing from the processed food industry songbook.'
'..Nash's National Party still accepts tobacco funding, which is a clear conflict of interest for a minister responsible for tobacco policy.'[1]

Resources

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Mike Daube, Nash fails in smoking, alcohol and now food labelling, Sydney Morning Herald, 17 February 2014