By Ryan Hanrahan
Politico’s Grace Yarrow and Meredith Lee Hill reported that “President Donald Trump said Thursday that he will use tariff revenue to offer cash bailouts for farmers who are struggling with trade uncertainty and other economic headwinds.”
“‘We’re going to take some of that tariff money that we made, we’re going to give it to our farmers, who are, for a little while, going to be hurt until the tariffs kick into their benefit,’ Trump told reporters in the Oval Office,” Yarrow and Lee Hill reported. “‘So we’re going to make sure that our farmers are in great shape, because we’re taking in a lot of money.'”
“Trump officials expect that Congress will need to authorize the use of tariff revenue for the farm aid package and are hoping lawmakers will include it in their omnibus package due by Nov. 21, according to three people familiar with the talks. That means the rollout of cash will likely start in early 2026,” Yarrow and Lee Hill reported. “The Trump administration has been exploring several ways to fund a farm aid package this fall for weeks as producers of top exports like corn and soy stare down a potential economic crisis that’s been exacerbated by the president’s aggressive tariff rollout.”
“The president, as he conveyed publicly Thursday, likes the messaging of using direct tariff revenue for the farm aid package, rather than tapping other funds, according to two of the people familiar,” Yarrow and Lee Hill reported.
Axios’ Ben Berkowitz and Madison Mills reported that “farmers quickly welcomed Thursday’s news.”
“‘If Trump is gonna use these tariffs as a weapon… I’m not saying it’s right or wrong… to a farmer it’s gonna seem fair if he’s being used as an international policy tool that he get compensated for it,” Rick Foust, a soybean and wheat farmer in north central Kansas, tells Axios,” according to Berkowitz and Mills. “‘Chances are it’s gonna cost (farmers) $10 and they’ll get $5 back.'”
Legal Questions Remain about Using Tariff Revenue
Agri-Pulse’s Oliver Ward reported that “the administration has been considering using its Section 32 authority to support farmers. Section 32 is funded by 30% of tariff receipts, which officials can use to buy surplus commodities in order to boost domestic consumption, encourage farm exports and increase farmers’ purchasing power, according to the Congressional Research Service. It has historically been used to buy commodities not covered by other mandatory support programs.”
“But there are legal restrictions on how officials can use Section 32. Only $350 million can be spent on restoring farmers’ purchasing power through direct payments, Bart Fischer, co-director of the agricultural and food policy center at Texas A&M University, said during the Ag Outlook Forum,” Ward reported. “The bulk of the revenues has to be used to fund child nutrition programs administered by USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service.”
Source : illinois.edu