Posted September 13, 2013
House Agricultural Committee Chairman Frank Lucas (R-OK)
voiced his opposition to a two-year extension of the farm bill, saying that the
extension might be an attempt to slow the bill’s consideration until it can be
written under different leadership, according to a KTIC Radio article,
available here.
Under House Republican rules, Lucas is scheduled to end
his term as Ag Committee Chair when this Congress concludes in 2014. Lucas says he will seek re-election in 2014,
and if the farm bill does not pass, he will ask the Republican Steering
Committee for an extension.
Lucas says more “outside the box” thinking is needed to
pass a farm bill this fall and “he is prepared to support” those “bigger ideas”
to get the job done, according to a Politico article, available here. Lucas said, “The challenges that will confront
the House and the Senate, when we both get there are so great. The positions are locked in so tight on so
many issues that to achieve a consensus that we can pass on both floors, that we
get the president to sign, we may have to think outside the box.”
Last fall, Congress failed to pass a farm bill, which “forced
the committees to accept a stripped-down New Year’s Eve extension dictated by
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell” (R-KY) and is due to expire on
September 30. House and Senate
negotiators will have two to three more months to make a deal, “but without
some bold strokes” a “comprehensive farm bill could again be doomed.”
First, a floor vote on House Majority Leader Eric
Cantor’s (R-VA) bill on the nutrition title which is said cuts $40 billion from
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), is expected late next
week. While Cantor has talked about
details of the bill, the actual text of the bill is “being closely held – as is
the Congressional Budget Office scoring of the proposal and its impact on
beneficiaries.”
