Community | April 01, 2011 | 17 comments

Farm subsidies paid to members of Congress while they slash other programs

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JanforGore
These subsidies are nothing more than payola for supporting industrial fossil fuel intensive GMO agriculture. No wonder some of these farmers don't want to stop planting these crops for their GMO masters. Making over 200,000 a year in planting their crap and trashing the planet seems like a good trade off for them. Are you really a farmer then, or simply no better than a greedy selfish Goldman Sachs vampire?

And I am not as nice about this as the EWG when it comes to Congress. If you aren't a farmer who actually works the land you should not get one. Period.


Excerpt:

"This would be a good place to point out that just five crops – corn, cotton, rice wheat and soybeans – account for 90 percent of all farm subsidies. Sixty-two percent of American farmers do not receive any direct payments from the federal farm subsidy system, and that group includes most livestock producers and fruit and vegetable growers.

Among the members of the 112th Congress who collect payments from USDA are six Democrats and 17 Republicans. The disparity between the parties is even greater in terms of dollar amounts: $489,856 went to Democrats, but more than 10 times as much, $5,334,565, to Republicans.

One reason for the disproportionate number of Republican lawmakers benefiting from farm subsidy programs is the current scarcity of rural Democrats in Congress – casualties of the Tea Party wave that swept into office in November of 2010. (This was despite the Democrats’ decision to bow to the wishes of the subsidy lobby by passing a status quo 2008 farm bill in a misguided bid to hang on to those seats.)

Several new members of Congress who won with tea party support have been less than eager to talk about farm subsidies ever since the news broke last year that they, or their families, personally benefit from those very taxpayer dollars.

EWG doesn’t believe that the payments to lawmakers are improper or illegal. But the fact that so many more Republicans in Congress receive so much more in farm subsidies than their Democratic colleagues does highlight the GOP’s controversial decision to spare those programs from the budget ax – even as it slashes funding for so many others. Consider:

•In January, David Rogers of Politico, and Phillip Brasher at the Des Moines Register, reported that the Republican Study Committee proposed to eliminate the meager federal funding for an organic food growers’ program without even mentioning the the possibility of cutting spending for entitlements that send checks out to largest producers of corn, cotton and other commodity crops – regardless of need.
•Then last week (March 21), National Journal reported that the Republican-led House Agriculture Committee is backing cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program – previously known as food stamps – in the face of record enrollment levels triggered by high unemployment. But not even minimal reductions were proposed to the excessive payments to wealthy farms.
The GOP-led support for subsidies also comes at a time when big commodity farms clearly don’t need taxpayer funding.

The farm sector is white-hot, and has generally fared extremely well as recession gripped the rest of the economy. Farm income and prices for commodity crops are soaring. In 2008, $210,000 was the average household income of farms that received at least $30,000 in government payments that year. But according to the House Agriculture Committee and the Republic Study Committee, payments to those farms should stay in place while the record 43 million Americans enrolled in SNAP – millions of whom are unemployed for the first time – face slashes in the help they get to put food on the table.

It’s important to note that two of the Republican senators who collect subsidies – Charles Grassley of Iowa and Richard Lugar of Indiana – have been long-time leaders in the effort to reform federal farm programs. Both have fought to right the gross inequity of sending 74 percent of taxpayer-funded payments to the largest and wealthiest 10 percent of farm operations and landlords. The top-heavy support for the biggest operations puts smaller family farms at a serious disadvantage and works against a more diverse and resilient food production system that could stand up against wild swings in weather or global markets – and provide Americans with a healthier food supply.

Of course, Democratic members of Congress have historically been subsidy recipients too, notably former House Agriculture Committee Chairman Charles Stenholm of Texas and former Senate Agriculture Chairwoman Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas.

Nor is the phenomenon of lawmakers receiving farm subsidies limited to the federal level. Recent media reports have shown that direct payments are even more common in state legislatures in Wyoming, Wisconsin, Montana, Idaho and South Dakota.

At EWG, we believe that farmers deserve a reasonable safety net to protect against damage from drought, storms and fickle markets. But the American public’s investment portfolio in agriculture needs to change. It’s indefensible to provide subsidies to well-off farmers and landowners, especially in the face of a booming farm economy and a federal budget squeeze. Meanwhile, farmers seeking modest federal support to protect water, land and wildlife are being turned away for lack of funds.

We’re also committed advocates for government transparency, and it’s deeply disturbing that the public’s ability to see who gets what from the federal farm subsidy system has been curtailed by the Obama administration. Under the Bush administration, the rules allowed the public to see through shell corporations and paper entities to identify the part owners of subsidized farms and show where the money ended up. The transparency pertained to lawmakers as well. For this analysis EWG was forced to resort to harvesting data from members’ disclosure forms. That was an arduous but ultimately worthwhile task when advocating for greater accountability and transparency, and it didn’t use to be necessary.

Some Congress members (or their families) collecting federal farm subsidies are major players in the annual farm subsidy drama, others have only bit parts in terms of the amount of subsidies they receive. Overall, the distribution of subsidies among members of Congress reflects the highly distorted distribution of farm subsidies among farmers and landlords in the United States – between 1995 and 2009, 10 percent of subsidy recipients collected 74 percent of all subsidies.

The current salary for rank-and-file members of the House and Senate is $174,000 per year, and members enjoy robust health benefits. But whether major or bit players, members of Congress who receive farm subsidies are part of a system that cries out for reform and poses stark choices between helping wealthy landowners or doing right by struggling farm and urban families and the environment."

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  1. groups:
    Community,   Green,   Sustainable Agriculture,   Earth Care,   1 more
  2. tags:
    Environment Markets industrial agriculture Food Prices 10 more
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17 comments // Farm subsidies paid to members of Congress while they slash other programs

  • GoodGodGuy
  • wally60
    • 0
      wally60  
    • http://blind.is

      the reason our fine goverment gets away with this and all other things.look at the people on this article argueing back and forth they keep us devided and screw us all the time are you repubs and dems just stupid both sides are screwing us and have been for so long were blind.is our revulotion going to be right against left or will we group together.corruption in our goverment this is what we should be fighting

    • 1 year ago
  • The_Wanderer_KS
    • +1
      The_Wanderer_KS  
    • Subsidies were meant to help fill the financial gap when problems arise, they are not just for mailing people checks because they got on some list

      These particular subsidies were put in place to protect the viability and diversity of American Agriculture, and specifically the SMALL AMERICAN FARMER!

      Any farmer that has made profits exceeding the national mean income should not qualify for these subsidies, nor should they be made available to farming companies with more then "x" owners/investors as this multiple ownership is a business tactic long used to alleviate risk on the single owner over all the same articles the subsidies are meant to cover the risks of.

      These funds and all the other funds allocated to agri stimulus in the nation should be put in one pot, and watched over zealously so they are available to cover the emergency agri expenses they were meant for.

    • 1 year ago
  • The_Wanderer_KS
    • +1
      The_Wanderer_KS  
    • Dem 6 reps taking $489,865 or $81,644.17 each
      Rep 17 reps taking $5,344,565 or $313,797.94 each

      Thats 3.84 times as much per person in subsidies for the Repubs over the Dems, and some of you down thread are wanting to mention that the Dems bilk this system as much as the Reps...sure sure sure, keep telling yourself that.

    • 1 year ago
  • samthesixth
    • -4
      samthesixth  
    • This has been going on for far too long. Both parties have members that take the subsidies. Currently the Repubs are fleecing the system for more, but the Dems have done their share also. Even Senator Al Gore took the farm subsidies. Most don't even have a farm, but I can show them what a real farm looks like.

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
    • +4
      JanforGore  
    • samthesixth:

      He actually had a farm and didn't support the Industrial model we see now. Why do you mention him in particular? Because I posted this? Why do you continue the low blows here? There's a difference if you have a farm, work the land, etc. as opposed to just taking it as payback from big ag. What this refers to is PRESENT time in which these people are cutting programs that help small farmers while taking this for themselves.The entire system needs to be revised to provide equal aid to all those who seek funds for protection of water, land , wildlife, crops, etc. If you are a member of Congress and have a farm and do all of those things and support farmers and truly use it for a good purpose, fine. That is not the case the way it is set up now.

    • 1 year ago
  • samthesixth
    • -6
      samthesixth  
    • JanforGore:

      I mentioned him specifically because he is the owner of this site. It has nothing to do with you. Pointing out truth is not a low blow, even if it involves Gore. If I wanted to do low blows, I would have mentioned the settlements to the massage gals he sexually harassed.

    • 1 year ago
  • NoJoe101
    • +6
      NoJoe101  
    • samthesixth:

      I can only assume you read this in braille & couldnt see the chart. What it`s time for is stop making excuses for the Right by pretending there`s some sort of equality between the two. Right & Left wing corporate bitches need to go, but lets wake up to which side has completely sold out.

    • 1 year ago
  • samthesixth
    • -4
      samthesixth  
    • NoJoe101:

      As one of the few actual farmers on this site, I am well aware of the issue and who is currently benefiting from the tax code and Big Ag. Sure more Repubs are doing it right now, but historically the numbers are about even. We are getting the shaft from both sides.

    • 1 year ago
  • JanforGore
  • samthesixth
  • Emucratic
  • JanforGore
  • JanforGore
    • +9
      JanforGore  
    • They actually take these subsidies as they seek to slash funds for organic programs and push out small family farmers? SHAME ON THEM.

    • 1 year ago
  • Gravity_Man
    • -1
      Gravity_Man  
    • JanforGore:

      Did anybody actually use the word "organic" back when Gore was a senator? We were all incredibly DUMB that long ago.

      Back then Japan thought nuclear reactors were a good idea too.

    • 1 year ago
  • samthesixth
  • Gravity_Man
    • 0
      Gravity_Man  
    • samthesixth:

      I recall a lady living out in the country wrote a large manual about farm living insights. She advertised it before she wrote it, then people stuck with her and didn't ask their money back, trusted her to deliver. Took her several years! I hear it was worth the wait. Mid 70's.

      Back before hotel massages too!

    • 1 year ago
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