Several representatives told the House Committee on Agriculture that recent tariff policy and trade developments have hurt U.S. farmers and that administration responses have been misdirected.
Representative Jim Costa (CA) described food and trade as "a national security issue," criticized an administration farm-bridge assistance program he said provided $12 billion domestically while referenced foreign support to Argentina was about "$40,000,000,000," and said specialty crop growers received only $1 billion of the domestic package. "$40,000,000,000 for Argentina, $12,000,000,000 for American agriculture," he said, adding that specialty crops have been left out repeatedly.
Why it matters: Lawmakers from major agricultural states said tariffs have closed or reduced foreign markets and raised input costs, harming producers' competitiveness. California growers and others warned that lost export markets may be permanent without robust trade and market access programs.
What members proposed: Members called for stronger market-access programs (Market Access Program, Foreign Market Development), congressional oversight of USDA reorganization and Secretary testimony, and equitable distribution of any farm aid to include specialty crops, sugar producers and foresters. Representative Costa pressed for expanded specialty-crop insurance and research funding.
Claims and response: Representative Gonzales and others said the administration "prioritized rushing a $40,000,000,000 bailout to Argentina." Another member countered that the Argentina operation was a currency swap and not a bailout, asserting U.S. agencies "profited from the currency swap." Members requested documents and hearings to clarify the transaction and its domestic impact.
Outcome: The committee did not vote on trade policy during the member day; members urged formal oversight and legislative fixes as the farm bill process continues.