| From Industry to E.P.A.: Lobbyist Now Oversees Pesticide Rules Kyle   Kunkler fought for a restricted weed killer that can harm plants and   wildlife when it drifts to nearby land. He’s now at the E.P.A., which   wants to allow its use.
 
 The   controversial herbicide, dicamba, works against “superweeds” that are   resistant to other treatments, but can harm crops on nearby farms.   Planting soybeans in Illinois.Credit...Scott Olson/Getty Images
 
 Oct. 21, 2025
 
 Until   recently, Kyle Kunkler was the top lobbyist for America’s soybean   industry. In that job he once boasted of helping to keep a controversial   weedkiller called dicamba in use, likening his back-and-forth with   regulators to a tennis match full of “rocketing volleys.”
 
 Now, he is that regulator.
 
 In   June, Mr. Kunkler was named the Trump administration’s top official in   charge of pesticide policy at the Environmental Protection Agency. Less   than a month later,  the E.P.A. proposed   allowing the use of herbicides containing dicamba, a chemical whose use   has twice been restricted by a federal court. Critics of the proposal   say it closely aligns with the soybean industry’s priorities.
 
 As   the deputy assistant administrator for pesticides, Mr. Kunkler will   lead the effort to finalize those plans. He is one of four former   industry lobbyists or executives overseeing the E.P.A. office that   regulates chemicals including pesticides.
 
 “It’s   incredible, the entire leadership of that office comes directly from   industry,” said Lori Ann Burd, a senior attorney at the Center for   Biological Diversity, which previously took the E.P.A. to court over   dicamba.
 
 Dicamba has become increasingly important to American cotton and soybean farmers to control aggressive “ superweeds” that are resistant to other weedkillers. But herbicides containing dicamba  tend to drift into neighboring fields, damaging crops or threatening....
 
 nytimes.com
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