By Mark Hertsgaard, cross-posted from his website
Providing yet another reason for its 9 percent approval rating,
Congress is attempting to write the nation’s next farm bill in
secrecy—sneaking it into law as part of the deficit reduction package to
be produced by the “supercommittee.”
This anti-democratic maneuvering could determine the shape of one of
the most important—and controversial—pieces of legislation Congress
considers, sometimes called the food bill because of its enormous
influence over what Americans (especially children) eat, what food costs
(here and overseas), whether our food is safe to eat and whether 45
million impoverished Americans (again, about half of them children)
continue to receive food stamps. The bill also helps determine whether
agriculture respects or pollutes our air, soil and water.
And the Farm Bill may not be the only law written behind closed doors
and fast-tracked through the legisilative process, thanks to the
supercommittee’s requirements. Ben Becker, a spokesman for the Senate
Agriculture Committee, rejects accusations of undue secrecy in the new
Farm Bill even as he emphasizes, “We didn’t choose this process. It was
forced on all committees.”
Reauthorized every five years, the farm bill is due for
reconsideration in 2012. Food movement activists had promised the
strongest, most unified campaign yet to reform the legislation away from
its emphasis on lavish subsidies for agribusiness and environmentally
destructive practices and toward family farms and sustainable
agriculture [see Dan Imhoff's “Farm Bill 101”].
Writing the bill in secret and sneaking it into law would not only
pre-empt citizen involvement and violate democratic norms, observes In
Defense of Food author Michael Pollan; it would also squelch the
prospects for reform. “So now what happens to an important proposal like
The Local Farms, Food, and Jobs Act, introduced by Representative
Chellie Pingree and Senator Sherrod Brown?” Pollan asked in an e-mail
interview with The Nation. “Does it even get a hearing? The writing of
agricultural policy in America has never been a shining example of
democracy at work; now, it threatens to devolve into a travesty.”
The proposed new version of the farm bill was at press time to be
submitted the first week of November. It was devised solely by the “gang
of four,” the two chairs and two ranking members of the House and
Senate Agriculture committees and submitted to the supercommittee in
hopes that it will be included in the deficit reduction plan, due by
Thanksgiving. There were no new committee hearings on the new farm bill
recommendations, no markups or votes. And if the supercommittee accepts
the bill as written, there will be no possibility of amending it on the
House or Senate floor or of voting on it separately.
Representative Collin Peterson, the Minnesota Democrat who helped
draft the bill, defends the fast-tracking of the farm bill on the
grounds that it will produce a stronger result than if the
supercommittee were to act on its own. In addition, interest groups were
allowed to submit proposals for the gang of four to consider in
drafting their bill.
But that’s not democracy, protests Ken Cook, head of the
Environmental Working Group, an NGO that has embarrassed corporate
farmers by publicizing how much taxpayer money they receive in crop
subsidies, sometimes for land that hasn’t been farmed in years. “Sure,
people are submitting ideas, but the [four] members of Congress sitting
around that table are mainly there to represent the interests of Big
Ag,” Cook told The Nation. “They have made it very clear their main
interest is in protecting a subsidy program for industrial agriculture….
Meanwhile, they reportedly want to cut roughly $4 billion from the food
stamps program over the next ten years, at a time of economic distress,
when we have 45 million people on food stamps in this country.
“If these are truly great ideas, let’s discuss them openly,” Cook
argues, adding that his organization is mobilizing its 1.1 million
followers and other parts of the food movement to say, in the words of a
new TV ad, No Secret Farm Bill.
“Either the supercommittee would in essence write the Farm Bill, with
no hearings or public input, or the Agriculture Committee and the
communities we represent would recommend reforms,” counters Becker.
“Even in the short time we were provided to offer recommendations to the
super-committtee, we have actively sought input from farm,
conservation, nutrition and other stakeholders and are including their
recommendations as we seek to reform the nation’s agriculture policy.”
“I agree with Mr. Becker that the process was imposed on the
agriculture committees, but this process did not impose a directive to
write an entire farm bill with no hearings…and no opportunity to amend
it,” responds Cook, who adds, “We’re hearing from a lot more [food
movement] groups now, such as the Center for Rural Affairs, Bread for
the World and Taxpayers for Common Sense, who are also starting to sound
the alarm. So we feel we’ll be able to let Congress know that this is
not OK—to use a draconian budget cutting exercise to avoid a democratic
consideration of our next farm bill and lock up these issues for the
next five years, especially when there is so much energy and interest
out in the country in reforming our food and farm policies.”
This article appeared in the November 21, 2011 edition of The Nation.
Friday, November 4, 2011
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1 comments :
Is the Super-Committee even democratic? (I really don't know, was wondering) Thanks.
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