[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 124 (Thursday, September 19, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6613-S6614]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FARM BILL
Mr. PRYOR. Mr. President, I rise to talk about the farm bill. Ten
days, that is all the time we have to work out some agreement on our
farm legislation before we revert to the 1949 farm policy in this
country.
Let me make this very clear to the American people and to my
colleagues. This has nothing to do with the traditional battle lines in
agriculture. This is not one of those Midwest farming versus Southern
farming type scenarios. This is not a specialty crop versus a row crop
type issue. This has nothing to do with that at all. It is an
ideological fight, where we see hyperpartisanship and gridlock politics
taking over the Congress.
Today, the House of Representatives has a vote. It is a very
important vote. What they are proposing is that they cut $40 billion
from the nutrition title over 10 years. That is $40 billion.
Here again, this is not about a traditional fight that you see and
you have seen for decades in agriculture. This is about hunger in
America. It is a sad fact. It is something that maybe people in this
building do not like to acknowledge. But we have people who are hungry
in this country. They may be people with whom we go to church. They may
be our neighbors. They may be friends, coworkers, folks with whom we
graduated from high school. They could be seniors or children or the
working poor. But we have people in this country who are hungry today.
Can you imagine America being the land of plenty and having hungry
people and having folks in this building--in the Chamber of the House
of Representatives--voting to not lend a helping hand when people need
it the most?
I am reminded of that great song, ``America the Beautiful,'' where it
starts out:
O beautiful for spacious skies,
For amber waves of grain,
For purple mountain majesties
Above the fruited plain!
It goes on and on and on to talk about the riches of this great
country. But, unfortunately, as I said, today we have way too much
hunger in our Nation.
The Congress can do something about that. The Congress can do
something about it. In fact, the Senate already has done something
about it. Thanks to Senator Stabenow and Senator Cochran and the
bipartisan efforts on the Senate Agriculture Committee, they made
responsible reforms in SNAP, in other nutrition programs to streamline
and fix and correct and improve the nutrition title. They went after
what we are concerned about, such as waste and abuse of the system, and
fraud. We all know you have some of that in these programs. But we have
a saying in our State. It is kind of a country saying. I know people
have heard it before. But we say: If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Our
agriculture law in this country ain't broke.
It can be improved, and I think that is what the Senate has done. The
Senate has been responsible. The Senate has worked in a bipartisan way.
Again, that bill passed through this Chamber a few months ago with 66
votes, a very bipartisan vote. That is the solution. That is the
solution of us working together.
Unfortunately, again we have people down the hall in the House of
Representatives who are going to put that in jeopardy with a ``my way
or the highway'' political solution. This is not good for the country.
I think the reason some of these folks are doing this is because they
do not understand the impact their decision could have on this country.
But let me put it in perspective. When we look at America, there are
lots of different ways to look at agriculture and look at our economy
and look at the global economy, but one way is this: We have several
core strengths in the U.S. economy. We do some things better than
anybody else in the world, and one of those is agriculture.
If we look at investment, if we look at innovation, if we look at new
farming practices and ways to conserve water--how to get more per
acre--all these things that improve and increase production and
nutrition, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, they come from America. It
is one of the core strengths of the U.S. economy. Everybody in the
world wants to be like America when it comes to agriculture. Everybody
wants what we have. They copy us. They model what they do after this
country. It is something we should be proud of. I know inside the
beltway it is not very exciting, it is not very flashy, but we have the
safest and highest quality and, in relative terms, the cheapest food
supply in the entire world. It is one of the true reasons for America's
strength.
But, unfortunately, if we do not pass a new farm bill by September
30, we run the risk of putting all that in jeopardy, and there could be
dire consequences. There is no question about it. If we talk to all the
experts, talk to all the economists, talk to the people who understand
this, what we can see very clearly is that crop prices will
destabilize, and that means some prices will go up, some will go down.
For example, soybean farmers all over this country are going to lose
their crop support. They are going to lose that protection that has
been there since the 1960s. Because it was not there in 1949, it will
be gone, and that will be devastating to the soybean industry. That is
just one little piece of the puzzle.
I could go on and on. We have a huge trade deficit in this country.
We know that. But our saving grace, when it comes to trade, is
agriculture. Those export programs to sell our ag products overseas
will be lost if this agreement is not reached.
Again, food prices will rise dramatically. We have heard others talk
about that even this morning. The Democratic leader mentioned it. But
it is going to hurt not only farmers, it is going to hurt families all
over this country.
[[Page S6614]]
This is personal to me. I know in the Acting President pro tempore's
home State of Hawaii they have a huge agricultural sector. I know it is
very important to his State. Everybody thinks of how beautiful Hawaii
is and tourism and all that, but agriculture is critically important to
his State's economy, just like it is for the other 49 States. In almost
every State--maybe with one or two exceptions--agriculture is very
critical to that State's economy. That is true for Arkansas.
Again, this is very personal for me. One in six jobs in our State is
related directly or indirectly to agriculture. Agriculture--we love our
Fortune 500 companies. We love having them. We have several that are
based in Arkansas. We are proud of them. But 25 percent of our State's
economy is tied to agriculture--25 percent.
So the question is, How do we fix this? It is something we will never
hear on the talk shows. We will not hear the talking heads chatter on
about this. But the way we fix it is to work in a bipartisan way, to
come together, to be very responsible--as the Senate has been on this
issue--to put something together, and to get it done.
This is why groups in my State, such as the Arkansas Farm Bureau,
Agricultural Council of Arkansas, Riceland Foods, Arkansas Rice Growers
Association, Tyson Foods, the Arkansas Cattlemen's Association, et
cetera, et cetera, et cetera--the list goes on--all supported what we
did in the Senate, and they do not support what is going on in the
House right now.
But even more important than the groups, I have been around my State,
of course, all year--and over the last 10 years. But during the August
recess, I went around the State, and every time I saw a farmer--and I
literally talked to hundreds of them--they said: Please, please, don't
let this happen. Don't let this happen. Why do we want to put all this
at risk? What we have now is working. Sure, we can make improvements.
Yes, we support the Senate bill. Even though the Senate bill is not
perfect, we support that because we know the importance of agriculture.
I would ask my House colleagues to please get themselves out of this
manufactured crisis they have created for us all. Let's turn off the
politics. Let's work together. The American people are counting on us.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The assistant majority leader.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, are we in morning business at this time?
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. We are.
Mr. DURBIN. Does the majority have the control for an additional
period of time?
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Yes.
Mr. DURBIN. How much time is remaining?
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. There is 20\1/2\ minutes.
Mr. DURBIN. Thank you very much, Mr. President.
____________________