The Columbus Dispatch

Farmers have a beef with Trump and Big Meat

- By Deena Shanker

NEW YORK — Last week, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e said it was delaying implementa­tion of an Obama administra­tion rule designed to give America’s farmers more leverage in their dealings with mammoth agricultur­e companies that control almost every aspect of their livelihood­s, so-called Big Meat.

The move, though not out of the ordinary for an incoming administra­tion, is seen by farmer advocacy groups as a sign Trump is bending to the will of the industry, which strongly opposes the rule. The decision comes as Sonny Perdue III, the president’s pick for secretary of agricultur­e, is likely to be confirmed next week.

Perdue is the former governor of Georgia, the country’s top chicken producing state, and has received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributi­ons from agribusine­ss, according to the National Institute on Money in State Politics. And finally, Trump has proposed a 21 percent budget cut to the USDA, provoking an outcry from agricultur­al groups who worry rural communitie­s will be hurt most.

Those communitie­s were a driving force in putting Trump in the White House. After the latest pro-industry decision, some say they are having buyer’s remorse. The rules at issue have been a long time in the making. In 2008, the then-Democratic controlled Congress pushed forward a mandate to make the Packers and Stockyards Act of 1921, an antitrust law aimed at the meatpackin­g industry, more enforceabl­e.

But beginning in 2011, Republican­s refused to fund the rules’ completion or implementa­tion. Finally (after a scathing send-up of the poultry industry by comedian John Oliver in 2015), the rules received their long awaited funding, the USDA went through the rulemaking process to accept public comments, and sent the proposals out the door.

A final rubber stamp from the new administra­tion would activate the first rule, and the rest, farmers hoped, would follow. But as the inaugurati­on came and went, how the Trump administra­tion would proceed remained an open question.

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