San Diego Union-Tribune

TENSION BUILDS OVER AGRICULTUR­E SECRETARY PICK

Clyburn wants nominee who will focus on hunger

- BY JONATHAN MARTIN Martin writes for The New York Times.

An unlikely fight is breaking out over President-elect Joe Biden’s choice for agricultur­e secretary, pitting a powerful Black lawmaker who wants to refocus the Agricultur­e Department on hunger against traditiona­lists who believe the department should be a voice for rural America.

Rep. James Clyburn of South Carolina, the highestran­king Black member of Congress and perhaps Biden’s most important supporter in the Democratic primary, is making an all-out case for Rep. Marcia Fudge, an African American Democrat from Ohio.

Clyburn, whose endorsemen­t of Biden before the South Carolina primary helped turn the tide for the former vice president’s campaign, has spoken to him on the phone about Fudge as recently as this week. The lawmaker has lobbied for her with two of the presidente­lect’s closest advisers and discussed the matter with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

“I feel very strongly,” Clyburn said in an interview Wednesday about Fudge, who leads the nutrition and oversight subcommitt­ee on the House Agricultur­e Committee.

“It’s time for Democrats to treat the Department of Agricultur­e as the kind of department it purports to be,” he added, noting that much of the budget “deals with consumer issues and nutrition and things that affect people’s dayto-day lives.”

But there are complicati­ons. Two of Biden’s farmstate allies are also being discussed for the job: Heidi Heitkamp, a former senator from North Dakota, and Tom Vilsack, the former Iowa governor who served as agricultur­e secretary for President Barack Obama.

The delicate proxy clash over the post, which is usually not as coveted as more highprofil­e Cabinet positions, has pitted Democrats eager to emphasize issues like hunger and nutrition against more traditiona­l members of the party who believe the department should represent rural America.

The sprawling agency oversees farm policy, the Forest Service, food safety and animal health but also the food stamp program, nutrition services, rural housing and rural developmen­t.

More broadly, the debate illustrate­s the challenge Biden faces as he builds his administra­tion. Every appointmen­t he makes interlocks with others, and if he does not select a diverse candidate for one position, it becomes more likely he will for other posts.

The Cabinet position specifical­ly is pinching Biden between two of his central campaign themes, which he repeated in plain terms this month in his victory speech: that he owes a debt to African American voters and that he wants to be a president for all Americans, including those who didn’t vote for him.

Nowhere did Biden fare worse than in rural America, particular­ly the heavily White parts of the farm belt.

“This is a choice that only Joe Biden can make, and he will make it understand­ing the unique challenges of rural America and what needs to happen in rural America moving forward,” said Heitkamp, a moderate who was defeated in 2018 after serving as attorney general and then senator in one of the most sparsely populated states in the country.

Recalling her campaign efforts on behalf of Biden’s “great rural plan,” Heitkamp predicted the president-elect would “pick the person who can implement that rural plan.”

Clyburn, though, said the Agricultur­e Department had for too long seemed “to favor big farming interests” over less wealthy people, whether they be “little farmers in Clarendon County, South Carolina, or food stamp recipients in Cleveland, Ohio,” Fudge’s hometown.

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Marcia Fudge

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