"Having blocked the
pending five-year Farm Bill, House Republican leaders now appear to be racing
ahead of their own Agriculture Committee to come up with some alternative to
protect the party’s farm state candidates during the upcoming August recess,"
David Rogers reports for Politico. "Disaster aid for livestock
producers hard hit by the current drought was one option under discussion
Tuesday, as well as a one-year extension of the current law due to expire Sept.
30.
"Farmers are wondering why
the stall on that and what the Farm Bill will offer, said House Speaker John
Boehner, reflecting the concerns of Republicans from agricultural
districts. “We understand the emergency that exists out in rural America
and we’re concerned about addressing it as quickly as possible.” Boehner said
he was working with Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, but Lucas did
not appear to be fully in the loop.
“I’d like some clarification of what
I’m picking up on the grapevine,” Lucas told Rogers, who writes: "Asked if
he was preparing a new package, the Oklahoma Republican answered with some
exasperation: 'I’m not writing a package at this moment. I’m just trying to
figure out what is going on for sure.'"
"Given the serious
drought, there’s little question that the pressure from farm state lawmakers is
growing," Rogers reports. "And Boehner, who spent his early years on
the House Agriculture Committee, seems eager to respond. Livestock producers
are most vulnerable because of the loss of good grazing lands as well as higher
prices for feed. The House and Senate farm bills promise disaster aid for the
current year, but without action, these producers are left without the
protection enjoyed by field crops, for example, covered by crop insurance. Two
leadership aides said a full-year extension of the current farm program was
being discussed. But this was news to the Senate Democratic leadership and
could be a perilous path given the fact that it would mean extending the
current system of direct cash payments to producers at a cost of close to $5
billion a year."(Read more)
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