Investigate Midwest
USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack says talking about the stuck-in-the-mud farm bill negotiations “ feels like ‘Groundhog Day .’”
Congress is required to approve a …
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USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack says talking about the stuck-in-the-mud farm bill negotiations “feels like ‘Groundhog Day.’”
Congress is required to approve a new federal farm bill every five years. The 2018 farm bill expired on Sept. 30, 2023. But the Republican-led House couldn’t get its version of the bill across the finish line amid GOP in-fighting over a host of issues.
With no other options and time running out, Congress was forced to extend the 2018 law to Sept. 30, 2024.
In the not-so-distant past, farm bill renewal to a significant degree revolved around negotiations between rural and urban lawmakers on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program as well as individual agriculture committee members advocating for crop commodity support based on where they lived. For example, in the South it would be cotton. In the West, wheat. The Midwest, primarily corn and soybeans. On the West Coast, vegetables, fruits and specialty crops.
Ten of the last 13 farm bills dating back to 1965 were essentially completed on time — by Dec. 31 in the year of expiration. And mostly bipartisan.
Discussions could be heated, but debate hadn’t devolved into the hand-to-hand Republican-Democrat trench warfare that has marked the last two years. That’s also the conclusion from the Congressional Research Service, which says “Over time, farm bills have tended to become more complicated and politically sensitive. As a result, the timeline for reauthorization has become less certain.”
Senate Agriculture Chair Debbie Stabanow hasn’t been shy about voicing her displeasure, saying in June that “I’ve actually been involved in six farm bills and led on three of them, and this has been the most frustrating time. Because it’s so much more partisan than usual and particularly around food assistance.”
Bipartisanship is out the window. Everything is up for passionate debate driven by party ideology that leaves little room for common ground.
So it was inevitable that when Sept. 30 rolled around this year lawmakers still hadn’t come to agreement.
To no one’s surprise, there remains huge divides over the $1.5 trillion package. Perhaps the biggest sticking point is GOP desire to place new limits on SNAP to offset additional spending on crop subsidies.
Lawmakers punted potential votes on the farm bill into the lame duck session that began this week. Democrats hoped wins in the November elections would force Republicans to capitulate on right-wing partisan issues.
But the GOP’s sweeping victories completely upended farm bill prognostication. Next year, Republicans will control all the levers of government.
Before the elections, a majority of Republicans called to place the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2024 on the House floor during the lame duck session:
“Farmers and ranchers do not have the luxury of waiting until next Congress for the enactment of an effective farm bill. Inflation has driven production costs to the highest on record, meanwhile commodity prices across the board have fallen precipitously, creating a severe margin squeeze on farm and ranch families.”
But the election shuffled the deck on farm bill policy considerations.
Prior to the election, one of the biggest reasons for farm bill gridlock was heated debate regarding the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. The law allocated $19.5 billion to USDA to dole out for programs that address climate-smart agriculture. Republicans wanted to use dollars earmarked for climate programs to increase payouts of Title I programs that give revenue support primarily for row commodity crops like soybeans, wheat and corn. Democrats strenuously disagreed.
But with climate change denier Donald Trump moving into the White House in January, hard-right GOP lawmakers will attempt to kill any and all appropriations meant to fight climate change.
The Heritage Foundation’s “Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise” Project 2025 playbook envisions major policy changes to the farm bill including:
My suspicion is that there will not be a farm bill deal in the lame duck. The most likely scenario is yet another one-year extension with short-term dollars for cash-strapped farmers hit by recent economic losses.
Longer term … it’s Katy bar the door for whoever replaces retiring Senate Agriculture Chair Debbie Stabanow and likely House Agriculture Minority Chair David Scott. Democrats have no political leverage.
There are key political questions: How far to the right will likely 2025 Speaker of the House of Representatives Mike Johnson be willing to push the GOP agricultural agenda? Will incoming Senate Majority Leader John Thune of South Dakota be forced by his caucus to change filibuster and cloture rules, making it easier to get bills on the floor for votes? As recently as two months ago Thune voiced his opposition to the idea under Democratic rule, but with the GOP takeover will Thune feel the same way?
There’s also a question of where Thune — a current member of the Senate Agriculture Committee — will eventually land when it comes to protecting farmers from corporate agricultural abuses.
It’s a fraught time for Democrats and farmers.