Former President Bill Clinton has been widely criticized for his last-minute presidential pardons but at least one was justified: his pardon of saccharin, falsely accused as a human carcinogen. On Dec. 21, Clinton signed legislation allowing removal of the warning label required since 1977 on saccharin-sweetened foods and beverages.
Congress on Dec. 15 passed H.R. 5668, the Saccharin Warning Elimination via Environmental Testing Employing Science and Technology (SWEETEST) Act as part of the Health & Human Services Appropriations Bill (H.R. 4577). "Sound, new scientific research results of more than two decades of study have decisively proven saccharin's safety," said Rep. Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), sponsor of the SWEETEST Act. Earlier, the National Toxicology Program had removed saccharin from its Ninth Report on Carcinogens, joining agencies such as the American Cancer Society, American Medial Association, American Dietetic Association and the American Diabetes Association in supporting the safety of saccharin.