House member says scarce baby formula is being sent to illegal migrants

"This is another example of the America last agenda that the Biden administration continues to perpetuate," said Rep. Cammack.

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On Wednesday, Rep. Kat Cammack (R-FL) said that she has discovered that the Biden administration is sending baby formula by the pallet load to the southern border for distribution to illegal migrants.

"The first photo is from this morning at the Ursula Processing Center at the US border. Shelves and pallets packed with baby formula. The second is from a shelf right here at home. Formula is scarce. This is what America last looks like," the Congresswoman tweeted on Wednesday:

According to Fox News, a Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agent sent her the evidence of the baby formula, who said that she "would not believe the shipment I just brought in."

Cammack continued: "He has been a border patrol agent for 30 years and he has never seen anything quite like this. He is a grandfather and he is saying that his own children can't get baby formula."

Cammack stated emphatically that it is "infuriating to me is that this is another example of the America last agenda that the Biden administration continues to perpetuate."

"I don't know about you, but if I am a mother, anywhere anytime in America, and I go to my local Walmart or Target or Publix or Safeway or Kroger or wherever it may be that you shop and you are seeing their shelves and you are seeing signs that you are not able to get baby formula.

"And then you see the American government sending by the pallet thousands and thousands of containers of baby formula to the border, that would make my blood boil," she concluded.

According to Fox News, disruptions in the supply chain were exacerbated when Abbott, one of the country's largest formula manufacturers,  issued a widespread safety recall.

According to an analysis by Datasembly, the percentage of out-of-stock baby formula currently sits at 43 percent, up from 30 percent at the beginning of April.

"This issue has been compounded by supply chain challenges, product recalls and historic inflation," CEO of Datasembly Ben Reich told Fox News Digital. "The category started to see stocking challenges beginning in July 2021, and the situation has continued to worsen into 2022."

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