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Farm bill nears OK; Bush gets GOP snub

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Filed: Country: Philippines
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by Mary Clare Jalonick - Associated Press

WASHINGTON - By a veto-proof majority, the House passed an estimated $300 billion farm bill with increased subsidies for farmers and food stamps for the poor amid rising grocery prices.

The measure was sprinkled with pet projects that lawmakers can take home to voters this election year.

The 318-106 vote for the five-year bill gave supporters 28 more than they need to override a promised veto from President Bush, who has complained that the measure is too expensive and generous to farmers now enjoying record earnings. "A bloated, earmark-laden bill," his Agriculture secretary said after the vote.

About two-thirds of the bill would pay for nutrition programs such as food stamps and emergency food aid for the needy. An additional $43 billion is for farm subsidies, while almost $27 billion would go to farmers to idle their land and to other environmental programs.

The Senate planned to vote on the bill today. Rejecting a veto by Bush would be even easier in the Senate, where farm states have greater representation than they do in the House. Congress has overridden only one veto, on a water-projects bill, during Bush's two terms.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said the measure "will drastically increase nutrition initiatives that will help 38 million American families put healthy food on their table."

She made it clear she would have preferred smaller farm subsidies but deferred to Democratic colleagues looking ahead to the fall campaign.

Only 91 Republicans voted against the bill. Bush was abandoned by 100 GOP lawmakers one day after the party lost its third straight special election this year for filling House vacancies. All three districts - one each in Illinois, Louisiana and Mississippi - include farm areas and now have Democrats in seats long held by Republicans.

Some Republicans criticized the mostly bipartisan bill over a few home-state pet causes, including tax breaks for Kentucky racehorse owners and additional aid for salmon anglers in the Pacific Northwest.

"This bill has been under consideration for a long, long time, and yet still we have earmarks that have been airdropped into the legislation," groused Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz.

Agriculture Secretary Ed Schafer renewed Bush's veto threat after the vote. "I encourage members of Congress on both sides of the aisle to support his stand for fiscal discipline and the best interests of America's farmers and ranchers," Schafer said.

The bill also would:

• Boost nutrition programs, including food stamps and emergency domestic food aid, by more than $10 billion over 10 years. It would expand a program to provide fresh fruits and vegetables to schoolchildren.

• Increase subsidies for certain crops, including fruits and vegetables excluded from previous farm bills.

• Extend dairy programs.

• Increase loan rates for sugar producers.

• Urge the government to buy surplus sugar and sell it to ethanol producers for use in a mixture with corn.

• Cut a per-gallon ethanol-tax credit for refiners to 45 cents from 51 cents. The credit supports the blending of fuel with the corn-based additive. More money would go to cellulosic ethanol, made from plant matter.

• Require that meat and other fresh foods carry labels with their country of origin.

• Stop farmers from collecting subsidies for multiple farm businesses.

• Reopen a major discrimination case against the Agriculture Department. Thousands of Black farmers who missed a deadline would get a chance to file claims alleging they were denied loans or other subsidies.

• Pay farmers for weather-related farm losses from a new $3.8 billion disaster-relief fund.

Congressional negotiators tried for weeks to come closer to the White House on the amount of money paid to wealthy farmers, one of the chief sticking points with the administration.

The legislation would make small cuts to direct payments, which are distributed to some farmers no matter how much they grow. The farm bill also would eliminate some federal payments to individuals with more than $750,000 in annual farm income or married farmers who make more than $1.5 million.

Individuals who make more than $500,000 or couples who make more than $1 million jointly in non-farm income also would be ineligible for subsidies.

http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/200...rmBill0515.html

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Brazil
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About two-thirds of the bill would pay for nutrition programs such as food stamps and emergency food aid for the needy. An additional $43 billion is for farm subsidies, while almost $27 billion would go to farmers to idle their land and to other environmental programs.

not really a farm bill, is it?

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USE THE REPORT BUTTON INSTEAD OF MESSAGING A MODERATOR!

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Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Vietnam
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Even though the price of commadities is going up and Big Ag companies like Cargill and ADM had record profits. We still have to supply Subsidies to them and no one complains. How is this any different than oil? We bash Big Oil but not Big Agriculture.

Why is the food stamp program run under the Dept of Ag?

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