Feb 15, 2024

Sparks Fly at Vilsack Farm Bill Hearing

Posted Feb 15, 2024 8:00 PM

Sparks flew at the House Ag Committee as Democrats and Republicans stood their ground on farm bill differences, and USDA Secretary Vilsack defended his handling of existing programs.

Vilsack immediately came under election-year fire from Ag Chair GT Thompson.

“In what seemingly is a daily occurrence, taxpayer dollars are being sent to every corner of the country, yet nothing has changed. We’re not producing more fertilizer, we’re not reducing the cost of production, we’re not making food more affordable, however we are burdening the taxpayer. We are losing ground on the world stage and we are a net agricultural importer.”

Vilsack had a different view.

“The last three-years of net cash farm income were record-setting, the best three-years in the last 50-years in this country, this year’s income projected at just below historical norms will make it the best four-years in recent history.”

But Republicans argued farm income was down last year, while USDA data projects an even sharper drop on lower prices this year.

Vilsack jousted with Republicans on everything from grocery prices to SNAP cuts and echoed panel Democrats that the answer is not to pare SNAP and IRA climate dollars that boost farm income.

“Ag appropriations talked about an 18-percent cut to our budget, so you can do the math. Maintain the IRA funding, let’s get a budget, pass a farm bill so there’s certainty in terms of the programs.”

But almost half-way through a one-year farm bill extension, Chair Thompson admitted the obvious.

“However, there remain significant headwinds to Congress’ success. It’s virtually impossible to create a robust farm safety net without significant investment.”

And so far, Ag Democrats insist, Republicans must take ‘no’ for an answer on repurposing SNAP or climate spending for safety net programs.

-NAFB