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Reaching a deal on a farm bill is essential for farmers to have certainty and productivity around major agriculture programs.
But to get the bill to the finish line, the following will have to happen:
- Bipartisanship
Leadership in the Senate and House will have to signal that they will allow a bipartisan bill to reach the floor and pass. Members will need to find a middle ground and coalesce around a plan that can get a majority in the House and 60 votes in the Senate.
All of this is much easier said than done because every individual member is passionate about a whole host of issues and compromise is not a favorite strategy these days, to say the least. The reality however is that there won’t be a one-party farm bill.
- Full funding for SNAP
The second reality is that SNAP will be fully funded in the next Farm Bill with maybe some trimming around the edges.
I have made that statement many times, in speeches around the country, with virtually no pushback. After a recent speech, a farmer pulled me aside to tell me SNAP was a benefit to farmers because food was being purchased and needy people were being fed.
I’m confident there are always ways to improve how government works. But dramatic cuts to SNAP won’t produce a bipartisan Farm Bill.
- Address budget concerns
There is never enough money for a farm bill and this bill has a big price tag. I suspect that some additional money will be found, but not in the magnitude needed to meet the needs listed by so many stakeholders.
I’m also confident that moving money from the Inflation Reduction Act to enhance other parts of the Farm Bill will be a nonstarter and won’t happen.
Somehow, some way, the size of the bill will have to reflect budget reality.
- Crop insurance enhancements
During the last year, as I have talked about the farm bill, one message has come across loud and clear, and that is to protect crop insurance.
A strong bipartisan bill will protect and, if possible, enhance crop insurance, and that will be the strongest talking point for voting yes on a bipartisan bill.
Finally, if ever there was a year for a status quo farm bill, it’s this year. This is definitely a time when protecting hard-won provisions will be a huge victory. That is the unfortunate reality we face.
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Mike Johanns was the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture from 2005-2007 as well as the Governor of Nebraska from 1999-2005 and the state’s U.S. Senator from 2009-2015. As alliantgroup’s Chairman of Agriculture, Johanns brings more than 30 years of experience at virtually every level of government and a strong background in both agriculture and economic development. As the Secretary of Agriculture, he managed 18 different agencies, opened or expanded access to 40 international markets and was responsible for multiple agricultural breakthroughs as a negotiator for the Doha Development Round.