Supreme Court grapples with multibillion-dollar wave of lawsuits over
Roundup cancer claims
[April 28, 2026]
By LINDSAY WHITEHURST
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court seemed divided Monday over whether
to block thousands of lawsuits alleging the maker of the weedkiller
Roundup failed to warn people it could cause cancer.
The case came before the justices after a tidal wave of litigation that
included some multibillion-dollar verdicts against the global
agrochemical manufacturer Bayer, which owns Roundup maker Monsanto.
Several justices seemed sympathetic to the company’s argument that it
can’t be sued under state law because federal regulators have found
Roundup likely doesn’t cause cancer. Others, though, grilled attorneys
about whether that wrongly stops states from responding to changing
research.
Roundup maker Monsanto is backed by the Trump administration, a legal
position that's at odds with some allies in the Make America Healthy
Again movement who want to rein in pesticide use.

The case before the court was filed by a Missouri man named John Durnell.
His lawsuit said he developed a cancer called non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma
after more than 20 years of serving as the neighborhood association’s
“spray guy,” using Roundup on parks in his historic St. Louis community.
A jury agreed that the company failed to warn him about possible cancer
dangers and awarded him $1.25 million. It's one of thousands of similar
cases, including some multibillion-dollar damage awards.
There's still fierce debate about cancer and Roundup’s key ingredient,
glyphosate. The World Health Organization’s International Agency for
Research on Cancer classified the chemical as “probably carcinogenic" in
2015, but the Environmental Protection Agency has determined that it's
not likely to be carcinogenic to humans when used as directed.
The agency approved a label without a cancer warning, and Bayer argues
that it’s required to follow those federal standards — not the state
laws that Durnell and others have sued under.
EPA reviews its labeling determinations every 15 years, which can be a
relatively long period in terms of scientific advancement, Justice
Ketanji Brown Jackson said.
Chief Justice John Roberts questioned whether waiting for EPA review
ties the hands of state courts. “Throughout that long process, in
response to information that suggests there is a risk that’s not on the
label, the states cannot do anything?” he questioned.
[to top of second column]
|
 Durnell's lawyers, on the other
hand, say that federal law doesn't stop Bayer from putting a warning
about possible cancer risk on its products under state law.
But Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Elena Kagan both
seemed concerned that facing liability under a thicket of different
state laws could make it tough for companies and undermine the
purpose of federal regulations. “Do you think it’s uniformity when
each state can require different things?” Kavanaugh said.
Bayer disputes the cancer claims but has set aside $16 billion to
settle cases, and proposed a major settlement earlier this year. At
the same time, it has tried to persuade states to pass laws barring
new cases, and a few have agreed.
The company has faced more than 100,000 Roundup claims, mostly from
home users. It has stopped using glyphosate in Roundup sold in the
U.S. residential lawn and garden market. The company has said it
might have to consider pulling glyphosate from U.S. agricultural
markets if the lawsuits persist.
American Farm Bureau Federation said in court documents that
removing it from the market would have an "immediate, devastating
risk to America's food supply" at time when the industry is already
under pressure.
Environmental groups say Bayer wants to keep juries out of the
lawsuits because of its state court losses.
Meanwhile, pesticides have created a rift between the administration
and members of Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy's MAHA movement,
who were also frustrated with an executive order aimed at boosting
glyphosate’s production.
Kennedy himself has said repeatedly that glyphosate causes cancer,
even as he says he recognizes the executive order was necessary for
food supply and national security reasons.

Dozens of MAHA activists and supporters on Monday gathered outside
the Supreme Court for what they called a “People vs. Poison” rally
to decry Monsanto’s efforts to shield itself from lawsuits.
The Supreme Court is expected to decide the case by the end of June.
__
Associated Press writer Ali Swenson in New York contributed to this
report.
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |