The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Both sides praise Perdue at hearing

Ex-governor’s confirmati­on looks likely as agricultur­e department head.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

Things could WASHINGTON — not have gone better for former Gov. Sonny Perdue at his Senate confirmati­on hearing Thursday even if he had tried.

The Trump administra­tion’s nominee to lead the Department of Agricultur­e won praise from senators of both parties during his 2 1/2-hour turn before the Agricultur­e Committee, including the endorsemen­t of the panel’s influentia­l top Democrat, U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow of Michigan.

His confirmati­on appears all but assured — the real question is when that vote could occur.

The tone at Thursday’s hearing was friendly and upbeat, a striking departure from the fiercely partisan battles that marked the confirmati­on debates of some of President Donald Trump’s other Cabinet picks, including that of former Georgia Congressma­n Tom Price, now the health secretary.

Senators’ questions did not focus on whether Perdue was qualified to lead the 106,000

workers in the Agricultur­e Department. Nor did anyone bring up his biggest controvers­ies from his eight years as governor, including his multiple dust-ups with the state’s ethics agency or his finances.

Instead, lawmakers sought reassuranc­e from Perdue that he would look out for farming and agricultur­al interests in the Trump White House.

President Donald Trump’s proposed 21 percent budget cut to the Department of Agricultur­e and his stances on immigratio­n and trade have created anxiety in the ag community, which relies on exports and foreign labor to help make ends meet.

“Last week’s budget proposal made it clear that rural America is not a top priority for this administra­tion,” Stabenow said.

Perdue in turn promised to stand up for the industry and rural America at the White House.

“If I’m confirmed, I’m going to get under the boards and get some room and work for agricultur­e producers and consumers and let this administra­tion and any of the people who are making those decisions in that budget area know what’s important to America,” Perdue said.

Senators also sought commitment­s from Perdue that he would look out for their specific home state crops, livestock and forests in next year’s Farm Bill fight. As ag chief he would be a major player in those discussion­s, which will set agricultur­e, nutrition and conservati­on policies, including crop subsidies, for the next five years. For some farm state senators, it may not pay to make an enemy of Perdue now when they may need a favor next year.

In his testimony, Perdue, 70, laid out his background as the son of dairy farmers in Middle Georgia while focusing little on the individual scuffles of his years in the state Senate and Governor’s Mansion. He instead discussed his broad vision for running the Agricultur­e Department, which includes increasing opportunit­ies for American farmers at home and abroad, protecting forests and the safety of the country’s food supply, and running the sprawling federal agency more effectivel­y.

“We will face the greatest challenges facing the agricultur­al industry and rural America while collaborat­ing to make opportunit­ies for the future,” Perdue told senators.

At the top of the hearing, Perdue brought out former Georgia U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss, who himself once ran the Senate Agricultur­e panel, as well as U.S. Rep. David Scott to speak on his behalf.

Scott, a Democrat from Atlanta, highlighte­d Perdue’s bipartisan credential­s, telling stories of their time in the Georgia Senate, and he used an extended biblical reference to describe what he saw as Perdue’s role as governor and that of his two Democratic predecesso­rs in Georgia’s flag fight.

“God chose three people to get us to the promised land,” Scott said. “Jacob, which was our Zell Miller. ‘Cause Zell Miller had to go up and wrestle with this issue. And then came our Moses, Roy Barnes, who provided the leadership right to it. But then we had our Joshua that got us across the Jordan River.”

Beyond Scott’s remarks and a few passing references to Perdue’s history as a walk-on football player at the University of Georgia, senators did not spend any time probing Perdue’s ethics record in Georgia or his finances, despite some recent attention in the national media.

Stabenow told reporters following the hearing that she had been planning to ask Perdue about those topics in a second round of questions but that a Senate vote had cut the hearing short.

“Given the situation with the votes on the floor, I will raise those for the record and have raised those with him privately,” Stabenow said. She added: “After looking at everything, my feeling is that he answered the questions. He’s resolved issues on conflict of interest and has addressed other issues.”

Agricultur­e Chairman Pat Roberts compliment­ed Perdue’s performanc­e after the hearing and said he would look to advance his nomination through the committee “as soon as possible.”

“Welcome to a nominee who not only knows agricultur­e, but cares about it,” the Kansas Republican told reporters. “We have told the leadership that we’d like to move him as soon as possible, and the leadership has agreed.”

With the Senate on recess the weeks of April 10 and 17, it’s possible senators may not have time to confirm him before they leave.

Donning the same blue tie with tractors that he wore when he interviewe­d for the job in Trump Tower, Perdue arrived in the Russell Senate Office Building on Thursday morning with a considerab­le Georgia posse. About 30 former staffers from his time in the governor’s office were in attendance, he said, as well as his wife, four kids and all 14 of his grandchild­ren. U.S. Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Albany, and Georgia Agricultur­e Commission­er Gary Black were in the crowd, as was Zippy Duvall, the American Farm Bureau president and former head of the Georgia Farm Bureau.

U.S. Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga., who serves on the Senate Agricultur­e panel, was at Thursday’s hearing but signaled he did not think it was appropriat­e to ask his first cousin questions.

“The only thing I can say is good luck, cuz,” he said.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS / AP ?? Agricultur­e Secretaryd­esignate, former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue (center), accompanie­d by former Georgia Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., (left) and Rep. David Scott, D-Ga., prepares to testify at his confirmati­on hearing.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS / AP Agricultur­e Secretaryd­esignate, former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue (center), accompanie­d by former Georgia Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., (left) and Rep. David Scott, D-Ga., prepares to testify at his confirmati­on hearing.
 ?? DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., (left) talks with Sonny Perdue, President Trump’s nominee to lead the Agricultur­e Department, before the start of Perdue’s confirmati­on hearing.
DREW ANGERER / GETTY IMAGES Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., (left) talks with Sonny Perdue, President Trump’s nominee to lead the Agricultur­e Department, before the start of Perdue’s confirmati­on hearing.

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