Farm bill
Coverage of Farm bill in the Nexus archive.
- Congress is settling in for a do-nothing summer
Congressional Republicans face stalled legislative progress due to intraparty conflicts, tight margins, and President Trump's demands, leaving major bills like the defense policy and farm bill unfinished. House leaders have lost control of their chamber, and frustrations grow as deadlines pass without action.
- States want transparent laws around animal agriculture. A fight in Congress could derail that.
Congressional disagreements over the farm bill have stalled its reauthorization, with the Senate excluding the Save Our Bacon Act from its draft while the House included it. The Act aims to override state laws like California’s Prop 12, which restricts pork from extreme animal confinement. Advocacy groups and industry groups oppose each other’s positions on these regulations.
- North Carolina Attorney General asks Congress to restore SNAP benefits
North Carolina's Attorney General Jeff Jackson and AGs from 22 other states are urging Congress to reverse changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) introduced by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The Act added work requirements for seniors and parents and required states to contribute to SNAP benefits in some cases.
- Opinion | Harmful Farm Bill proposal would worsen food insecurity in Michigan
The article argues that a proposed Farm Bill would worsen food insecurity in Michigan. Monique Stanton, president and CEO of the Michigan League for Public Policy, is cited as the author.
- Farm animal welfare rules might be rolled back by Congress
Congress is considering rolling back state animal welfare laws through the farm bill, with the Save Our Bacon Act targeting California’s Proposition 12, which mandates cage-free livestock confinement standards. Opponents argue the law burdens producers, while supporters claim it reflects consumer demand for higher welfare standards.
- Farm animal welfare rules might be rolled back by Congress
Congress is considering the Save Our Bacon Act, which aims to block states from regulating livestock confinement standards, targeting California’s Proposition 12. The act opposes requirements like cage-free housing and bans on gestation crates, with supporters claiming it protects farmers from external regulations and opponents arguing it undermines consumer-driven animal welfare demands.
- Farm animal welfare rules might be rolled back by Congress
Congress is considering the Save Our Bacon Act, which aims to block states from regulating livestock confinement standards, targeting California’s Proposition 12. The act opposes laws requiring cage-free conditions for animals, while supporters of state laws argue consumers demand higher welfare standards. Opponents claim such regulations burden producers with inconsistent market requirements.
- House votes to allow rotisserie chicken food stamps purchases
The U.S. House of Representatives passed an amendment to the farm bill allowing rotisserie chicken purchases with SNAP benefits. The bipartisan vote was 384-35, marking a change to long-standing restrictions on food stamp usage for items requiring home cooking.
- House passes sprawling farm bill despite GOP infighting
The House passed a major five-year farm bill reauthorizing agricultural and food programs, overcoming Republican infighting that had threatened to derail the legislation. The bill passed 224-200 with 209 Republicans, 14 Democrats, and one independent supporting it.
- House strips controversial pro-pesticide policies from farm bill
The U.S. House of Representatives voted to remove controversial pro-pesticide policies from the farm bill, which sets national agriculture policy for five years. The amendment passed with 280-142 votes, led by Rep. Anna, amid GOP infighting.
- Johnson quashes farm bill rebellion to pass budget blueprint for reconciliation 2.0
Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) passed a budget blueprint for a second reconciliation bill to fund immigration enforcement, quashing a rebellion over the farm bill. The 215-211-1 party-line vote brought Congress closer to ending the Department of Homeland Security's operations.
- House GOP leaders punt farm bill amid intraparty division
House GOP leaders delayed a vote on the farm bill due to internal party divisions over certain provisions. Speaker Mike Johnson extended a procedural rule vote to facilitate the delay, reflecting ongoing Republican disagreements.
- House GOP clears key hurdle for FISA, farm bill, ICE funding in dramatic vote
House Republican leaders cleared a major hurdle by passing a rule to advance three key pieces of legislation: the farm bill, FISA reauthorization, and ICE funding. The House voted 216-210 along party lines to adopt the rule.
- Pro-pesticide provisions complicate farm bill’s passage
A pro-pesticide provision in the farm bill is causing delays in its House passage due to opposition from Republicans aligned with the 'Make America Healthy Again' (MAHA) movement. The provision aims to block lawsuits against pesticide companies, creating a major point of contention.
- House tees up vote on ethanol compromise, which would attach to Farm Bill
The House is preparing to vote on a biofuel bill that would allow year-round sales of high-ethanol gasoline, typically restricted in summer due to smog concerns, and tie it to the Farm Bill for Senate consideration. The legislation also includes reforms to biofuel-related processes.
- House in limbo as GOP struggles to find path for spy powers, farm bill, ICE funding
House Republicans' legislative agenda, including reauthorizing foreign spy powers, passing the farm bill, and funding ICE, is stalled due to internal disagreements with hard-line conservatives. The party's two-step plan to resolve the DHS funding stalemate faces challenges in securing consensus.
- Trump is blocking solar for farmers. Can the Farm Bill fix that?
President Donald Trump has hindered the Rural Energy for America Program (REAP), which assists farmers in reducing energy costs through solar energy. The Trump administration froze REAP, and advocates are seeking the Farm Bill to address the damage.
- The farm bill could signal the death of responsible dog sports
The farm bill includes an amendment that may ban routine dog training methods and canine sporting events, driven by animal-rights extremists. This could impact lawful hunting and traditional dog training practices.