The Senate’s New Farm Bill Would Prioritize Climate. Too Bad It’s Doomed.
Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-MI) at a US Capitol press conference.Michael Brochstein/Zuma
This story was originally published by Grist and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
On Monday, Senator Debbie Stabenow, a longtime champion of programs that support farmers and increase access to nutritious foods, introduced a new version of the farm bill, a key piece of legislation typically renewed every five years that governs much of how the agricultural industry in the US operates.
Stabenow, who is retiring next month after representing Michigan in the Senate for 24 years, has staked her career on her vision for a robust, progressive farm bill, one that, among other things, paves the way for farmers to endure the worst impacts of the climate crisis.
The text of her bill comes almost two months after the 2018 farm bill, which initially expired last year and was revived thanks to a one-year extension, expired for a second time on September 30. And it comes mere weeks before the end of the year, when funding for several programs included in the farm bill will run out.
But more importantly, the bill comes after many months of infighting between Democratic and Republican lawmakers over what matters most in the next farm bill—and just weeks before the current congressional term ends. In order to pass the bill, Stabenow would need to gain the support of Republicans in the Senate agriculture committee and the House of Representatives, where Democrats lack the votes necessary to pass their own version of the legislation.
It’s likely, even expected, that that won’t happen. Sen. John Boozman, a Republican from Arkansas who is likely to chair the Senate agriculture committee after Stabenow’s retirement, criticized her bill on X, calling it an “insulting 11th hour partisan proposal.” Meanwhile, in the House, Republicans are reportedly hoping instead to pass another one-year extension of the farm bill, pushing negotiations over the new bill into next year, according to Politico.
There’s virtually no reason for Republicans not to prolong the process of hammering out the........
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