Our money, their mouth, your choice

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crop fields

If the political polls are to be believed, November’s midterm election will sweep today’s Democrats out of power in the U.S. House of Representatives and put Republicans back in charge.

If accurate, House Republicans will have a splendid opportunity to put your tax money where their collective mouth is by implementing their highly detailed, little-publicized Blueprint to Save America, a 122-page, “alternate budget” introduced by the House Republican Study Committee (RSC) June 9.

If you’re a small government/fiscal conservative, the Blueprint is 200-proof catnip. It attacks dozens of government programs as either “socialist,” “radical” or “insidious” and wastes little ink on ways to reform any. Instead, its favorite alternative is the ax and its prescribed fix is either complete elimination or deep program cuts.

On the block

This is especially true when the Blueprint starts swinging at the U.S. Department of Agriculture and its farm and ranch support programs.

For example, under the deeply red Blueprint, the RSC — of which four out of five House Republicans are members — would:

  • “Remove nutrition programs from the Farm Bill.”
  • Eliminate the nation’s two, “duplicative,” federal crop insurance programs to save “$42.7 billion over 10 years.”
  • Replace both with a single program whose “subsidies (would be) 30%” instead of today’s “60%” and “would only be offered to pay for catastrophic policies.”
  • And “phase out the Sugar Program,” “prohibit new enrollments in the Conservation Reserve Program” (to effectively kill CRP in 10 years) and end the “Conservation Stewardship Program.”

Additionally, the GOP House group would “eliminate the Milk Program,” “prohibit funding for National School Lunch Standards,” eliminate “the Rural Water and Waste Disposal Program Account,” and dismantle “ McGovern-Dole International Food for Education Program.”

And that’s just a start and just USDA.

The Blueprint also urges big tax cuts, deep cuts in environmental oversight, greater defense spending and privatization of federal agencies like the Animal Plant Health Inspection Service.

Yes, that’s right: no “milk program,” no “sugar program,” and no CRP.

Also, no federal crop insurance other than a “catastrophic” policy where farmers would pay 70% of the premium, not today’s 40%.

And, yes, remove all “nutrition programs” — programs like the vast Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — from the Farm Bill that would give every non-rural, non-farming House member the perfect reason to never vote for any Farm Bill again.

Unlikely agreement

Coincidence or not, two weeks after the Blueprint went public, the decidedly not conservative and not happy Environmental Working Group released its own analysis of recent federal farm program spending.

It, too, was a stunner because it agrees with the GOP Blueprint’s key assertion: farm program spending is out of control. The problem, however, claimed the EWG, was the last Republican in the White House — not today’s CRP, not crop insurance, not the milk or sugar programs and certainly not SNAP.

“The government paid a record $41.6 billion in a variety of subsidies to farmers in 2020,” reported the Food & Environment Reporting Network in reviewing the EWG’s analysis, “double the amount they received in 2018, when the Trump-era cash gusher began flowing…”

And, FERN went on, “…farmers received a combined $91.6 billion in 2018, 2019 and 2020 from crop insurance, traditional crop supports, trade war assistance and pandemic relief,” under the Trump Administration that few — if any — Congressional Republicans or Democrats even questioned.

If you add in 2021 data, direct farm program payments for the most recent four years total $115.5 billion. That means 29% of all net farm income earned by farmers, ranchers and landowners between 2018 and 2021 came from U.S. taxpayers.

Little wonder House Republicans consider USDA a ripe target for spending cuts.

Or do they? If put in charge, would Republicans really cut crop insurance, gut CRP and eliminate the dairy and sugar programs or is the Blueprint more baloney than beef?

Who knows, but when most House Republicans and the Environmental Working Group agree that farm program spending is out of control, farmers and ranchers might have a problem.

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