House
Passes Massive Farm Bill
Tax Issue Prompts GOP
Opposition
By Dan Morgan
Special to the Washington Post
July 27, 2007

Third-generation farmer Bill Chandler stands
in his empty field which butts up against housing development
Tuesday, July 17, 2007, in Parlier, Calif. Farmers like Chandler are
finding it increasingly difficult to turn down lucrative offers to
turn their farmland into housing development. Millions of dollars in
the 2007 farm bill are aimed at keeping fruit growing on land like
Chandler's in perpetuity. (AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian)
(Gary Kazanjian - AP) Saturday, July 28, 2007; A01
The House yesterday passed a far-reaching new farm
bill that preserves the existing system of subsidies for commercial
farmers and adds billions of dollars for conservation, nutrition and
new agricultural sectors.
Passage of the 741-page bill by a vote of 231 to
191, after partisan battling unusual for farm legislation, was a
major achievement for the new Democratic leadership.
With most Republicans opposing the five-year bill
over a tax issue, House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) hammered out a
compromise that held together a shaky majority of Democratic
farm-state lawmakers committed to the entrenched farm subsidy
system, together with urban liberals and reformers seeking sweeping
changes.
"This signals change and a new
direction," said Pelosi, in calling for the party to stick
together on the contentious vote.
The bill, which has a price tag of almost $286
billion, boosts spending on preservation of grasslands and wildlife
habitat, and mandates a major study of the Chesapeake
Bay watershed as a first step to restoring
the bay by reducing agricultural and other wastes.
The measure updates the food stamp program,
indexing benefits to inflation, increasing the minimum benefit and
raising the standard deduction. Youth obesity is addressed by a
program to introduce healthful snacks in schools, and more money is
authorized for famine relief abroad.
In an important victory for consumer
organizations, imported meat, including hamburger made from multiple
animals, will be labeled by its country of origin starting in
October 2008.
Pelosi also cited the bill's emphasis on credits
and loan guarantees for new forms of biofuel produced from grasses
and biomass. "Future farm bills will never look the same,"
she said.
Nonetheless, major hurdles remain before the
massive legislation becomes law.
The
White House, citing insufficient reforms
of the subsidy system, has threatened a veto. Only 19 House
Republicans supported the bill's passage because of the last-minute
addition of a tax provision needed to offset the new
Democratic-backed spending on food stamps and nutrition.
Rep.
Robert W. Goodlatte (Va.), the ranking
Republican on the House
Agriculture Committee, accused Democrats
of "poisoning the well" by adding the tax provision to
what had been a bipartisan farm bill. Business lobbies, including
the National
Association of Manufacturers, warned that
the action could discourage foreign investment and cost jobs.
Democrats said the provision merely closes a
loophole that allows a limited number of U.S. subsidiaries of
foreign companies to avoid taxes. Aides said it is aimed at
companies headquartered in tax havens such as Bermuda,
with which the United States has no tax treaty. Subsidiaries avoid a
tax bite by funneling earnings through European countries that have
reciprocal tax-reduction arrangements with the United States.
Rep.
Lloyd Doggett (D-Tex.), a senior member of
the House
Ways and Means Committee, said the
provision levels the playing field for "small American
companies that are paying their share of taxes."
House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin
C. Peterson (D-Minn.) charged that
Republicans had fixed on the tax issue as an excuse for killing the
bill. "They don't want to see success," he said.
But Democrats acknowledged that the entanglement
of business issues in the farm bill could cause problems down the
line.
Last week, a coalition of business groups,
including the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and Business
Roundtable, urged Congress to reject a farm bill that did not make
major cuts in agricultural subsidies, so as to expedite a global
trade deal benefiting manufacturers.
Developing countries are demanding a reduction in
U.S. and European agricultural protections before opening their
markets to American manufactured items.
Peterson responded hotly yesterday, saying
farm-state lawmakers were in no mood to appease big business.
Previous trade deals, such as the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA),
have been tailored mainly to help manufacturers and have not been
good for U.S. agriculture, he said.
In defiance of international trade rules that
discourage price supports that lead to overproduction, the bill
raises price guarantees for wheat, soybeans and sugar.
Pressures on Congress could increase after a
ruling this week by the World
Trade Organization in Geneva.
A WTO panel held that the U.S. cotton industry has not adequately
responded to a 2005 ruling that certain subsidies violate
international trade agreements. The panel said Brazil
has the right to retaliate.
The centerpiece of the bill is a web of price
guarantees and direct payments going mainly to corn, wheat, cotton,
rice and soybean growers in a few Midwestern and Southern
states. The cost to taxpayers will be
about $7.5 billion a year.
Farm organizations pulled out all the stops to
defend this system, hiring lobbyists, setting up blogs attacking
critics and buttonholing farm-state lawmakers. Among the lobbyists
was the former chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, Larry
Combest (R-Tex.).
The House bill includes a new concession for cane
and beet sugar producers, ensuring that they will not have to cut
back on their planting when unrestricted Mexican sugar imports start
next year under NAFTA. The Department of Agriculture will be
required to buy up volumes of sugar comparable to the imports and
sell it to ethanol plants for a reduced price, at a 10-year cost to
taxpayers of $1.4 billion.
In the last-minute jostling, a provision to make
leaf tobacco farmers eligible for funds to promote their product
abroad was stripped to avoid a floor battle with anti-tobacco
forces. Rep.
Bobby R. Etheridge (D-N.C.) had argued
that it was a "matter of patent fairness" to tobacco
growers.
Farm-state lawmakers also united yesterday to
defeat an amendment by Minority
Leader John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) aimed at
preventing farmers from reaping unintended windfalls from a key
subsidy, the loan deficiency payment. In 2005, the subsidy cost
nearly $5 billion.
Late Thursday, an amendment by Rep. Ron
Kind (D-Wis.) to reform the subsidy system
garnered only 117 votes. Kind was backed by consumer, environmental,
religious and anti-hunger groups.
The defection of Republicans this week forced
Democratic leaders to scramble to strike deals with urban liberals
to assure the final majority.
In the maneuvering, the Congressional
Black Caucus came away with at least $100
million to help the USDA
settle discrimination lawsuits filed by minority farmers. But the
dealmaking forced a hasty search for offsetting funds.
To help pay for mandatory new spending on food for
children abroad, Democratic leaders imposed a new "conservation
fee" on some offshore oil and gas leases. It would recoup
billions of dollars in royalties lost because of faulty federal
leases with companies operating in deep waters of the Gulf
of Mexico.
Morgan, a former Post reporter who specialized
in agriculture, is a contract writer of the newspaper and a fellow
with the German Marshall Fund, a nonpartisan public policy
institution.
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