The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Agricultur­e chief out; Perdue in running

Rural voters worry industry may not be high priority.

-

WASHINGTON — Secretary Tom Vilsack left the Agricultur­e Department a week before his tenure ends and before President-elect Donald Trump has chosen his replacemen­t.

Vilsack, who has led USDA for eight years and was President Barack Obama’s longest-serving Cabinet secretary, told employees in an email that Friday is his final day. The email did not say why he was leaving early.

As Vilsack leaves the department some in farm country are worried that agricultur­e may be a low priority for the new administra­tion. It is the only Cabinet position Trump has not moved to fill, yet rural voters were key to delivering him the presidency.

While several possible names have been floated, Trump has narrowed in on former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue for the job, according to multiple people with direct knowledge of the situation.

A veterinari­an-turned-politi-

cian with a long history in middle Georgia agribusine­sses, Perdue helped craft Georgia agricultur­e policy in the 1990s as a Democratic state senator from Houston County before switching to the GOP in 1998.

Trump and his team have interviewe­d Perdue, along with several other candidates, including former California Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado. They have also talked to potential candidates from Texas and Indiana, home state of Vice President-elect Mike Pence. Ted McKinney, director of the Indiana State Department of Agricultur­e, was at Trump Tower on Thursday.

Farm-state lawmakers in Congress say they are eagerly awaiting the decision.

“We brought him home,” Kansas Sen. Pat Roberts, the Republican chairman of the Senate Agricultur­e Committee, said Thursday of delivering on Trump’s win. “Farmers, ranchers and small-town America brought him home. So obviously they’d like to see a secretary of agricultur­e that would be their champion. That hasn’t occurred yet. So we hope it will.”

According to exit polls conducted for AP and television networks by Edison Research, about 17 percent of voters in this year’s election were from small cities or rural areas, and 62 percent of them said they voted for Trump. But Trump has little agricultur­al history, and spoke rarely about farm issues on the campaign trail.

“People don’t know what he stands for in agricultur­e and everyone’s waiting for the secretary to be named so you can get some clues,” said Roger Johnson, head of the National Farmers Union. Johnson said there is a “growing, intense frustratio­n” that a secretary hasn’t been named.

“When that individual is named, he or she will be at a tremendous disadvanta­ge, in terms of getting up to speed on all this department does,” Vilsack said in a statement, noting he was confirmed on Obama’s first day in office.

Kansas’ other senator, Republican Jerry Moran, heads the Senate Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee that oversees USDA. He said he contacted incoming Trump Chief of Staff Reince Priebus this week about the search and told him that who the secretary of agricultur­e is “matters greatly,” and “if there were any problems in that regard I was to be of help.”

Moran said he was reassured that the Trump team is working hard to find the right person.

“I am absolutely convinced this is a priority issue for the transition,” Moran said.

Incoming White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, in a daily briefing call with reporters Friday, played down any talk of a delay with the agricultur­e selection, saying that the president-elect had given it the same amount of attention and considerat­ion as his other Cabinet picks.

Spicer said Trump had met with “several” qualified candidates and would make a decision in the near future. Trump will be sworn in Jan. 20.

Vilsack is one of the nation’s longest-serving agricultur­e secretarie­s and has remained generally popular in farm country as he worked to balance the needs of high-dollar production agricultur­e with other growing parts of the industry, including organics. During his tenure, he also focused on rebuilding rural communitie­s, making school meals healthier and resolving civil rights claims against the department.

As for his next steps, he said in a statement that “I intend to be involved in promotion of agricultur­e and rural America, I hope to be connected to a university and work with young people, and I want to spend time with my family in Iowa.”

Michael Scuse, undersecre­tary for farm and foreign agricultur­al services, will be acting secretary until Trump is inaugurate­d.

 ??  ?? Former Gov. Sonny Perdue helped craft agricultur­e policy in Georgia as a state senator during the 1990s.
Former Gov. Sonny Perdue helped craft agricultur­e policy in Georgia as a state senator during the 1990s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States