New Reporting Exposes Political Influence Behind “Big Kratom” Campaign Against 7-OH

New Reporting Exposes Political Influence Behind “Big Kratom” Campaign Against 7-OH

HART: “This isn’t about public health, it’s about power, money, and market control.”

Source: HART

Excerpt: 

WASHINGTON, D.C. – New reporting from Politico and Forbes continue to reveal that the growing  campaign against 7-OH is being driven less by science and more by political influence and industry  money. “Big Kratom,” led by the American Kratom Association (AKA) and the Global Kratom Coalition  (GKC), is working to suppress 7-OH because it threatens their billion-dollar grip on the market. 

GKC and AKA, whose corporate members dominated the market until 7-OH came along, have used paid  lobbyists, paid academics, paid political groups and even paid protesters to distort science, sway  regulators, and eliminate any competition to their multibillion-dollar business. 

Botanic Tonics, maker of Feel Free, donated $500,000 in March to MAHA PAC, a political effort tied to  Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. This is the same Botanic Tonics founded by  JW Ross, the largest funder of the GKC. 

The contribution, the largest in the past year, came just as federal scrutiny intensified on 7-OH, raising  new questions about whether industry insiders are using political spending to shape enforcement in ways  that protect their market share. 

U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Markwayne Mullin, who holds financial stakes in Botanic Tonics, stood alongside federal officials when he was a U.S. Senator and advocated for federal action targeting 7- OH, including pushing for the Drug Enforcement Administration to evaluate the substance for potential  scheduling, further blurring the line between industry interests and federal enforcement priorities. 

“This isn’t about public health, it’s about power, money, and market control,” said Jeff Smith, National  Policy Director for HART. “We are seeing political influence and industry pressure converge around a  single narrative: make 7-OH the scapegoat.” 

The real public-health danger is coming from unregulated products like Feel Free, which combines  kratom and kava into an addictive cocktail that has caused severe physical and emotional harm to  consumers, including intense withdrawal, depression, skin deterioration, and emotional instability. 

The FDA abandoned its case against Feel Free but continues to pursue 7-OH, despite no FDA-reported  deaths, fueling concerns that the politics and powerful relationships are outweighing real consumer  protection. 

7-OH is not a synthetic drug or a novel chemical, it is a bio-identical compound naturally found in the  kratom plant. Yet it has become the focal point of aggressive lobbying and public messaging campaigns.

HART points to growing evidence that this narrative is being shaped not by science, but by competitive  pressure within the kratom industry itself. 

“7-OH represents something the legacy kratom market has long resisted: standardization, consistency, and  accountability,” Smith said. “That makes it a threat, not a danger.” 

HART also raised concerns about financial relationships shaping the scientific and regulatory debate  around kratom and 7-OH. 

Recent disclosures show: 

  • Industry funding directed toward academic research tied to regulatory advisory roles Longstanding financial relationships between kratom trade groups and consulting firms producing  “independent” analyses. 
  • A network of aligned organizations advancing similar policy outcomes while presenting  themselves as neutral actors 

“This is a familiar playbook,” Smith added. “Control the science, control the narrative, and eliminate  competition.” 

The overlap between rising political funding tied to MAHA-aligned efforts and escalating attacks on 7- OH is raising red flags for consumer advocates. 

“If ‘Make America Healthy Again’ is the goal, then policies should be driven by data, not by who has the  biggest lobbying budget,” Smith said. 

HART continues to advocate for a commonsense regulatory framework for kratom and its naturally  occurring compounds, including 7-OH, focused on: 

  • Age restrictions 
  • Clear labeling and dosing standards 
  • Third-party testing and manufacturing controls 
  • Consumer transparency 

“Americans deserve better than misinformation campaigns and backroom influence,” Smith said. “They  deserve policies rooted in science, transparency, and consumer safety, not scapegoating.” 

About the Holistic Alternative Recovery Trust (HART) 

The Holistic Alternative Recovery Trust (HART) is a national nonprofit dedicated to promoting evidence based, transparent policy around natural recovery compounds. HART supports responsible regulation that  protects consumers while encouraging innovation in safe, science-driven alternatives to traditional  pharmaceuticals.

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