House Republicans cleared a major hurdle Thursday, pushing their long-delayed farm bill through the chamber in a 224-200 vote after months of doubt over whether leadership could lock down the support.
The sweeping legislation overhauls food and agriculture programs while staying budget-neutral, a key demand from fiscal hawks. It marks the furthest any farm bill has advanced on Capitol Hill since the last reauthorization was signed into law in 2018.
The win didn’t come easy. GOP leaders leaned heavily on support from moderate and rural Democrats to get it across the finish line, giving Republicans a policy boost in agriculture-heavy districts heading into the midterms.
“Producers are currently facing some of the toughest times in farm economy since the 1980s farm crisis,” House Agriculture Chairman G.T. Thompson, R-Pa., said earlier this week. “And the simple fact is that the 2018 policies are no match for 2026 challenges.”
Farm-state Republicans and industry groups had been pressing Congress for weeks to act, warning that rising production costs, a spike in bankruptcies, and ongoing economic uncertainty are squeezing farmers nationwide.
Some Democrats ultimately broke ranks to back the bill, even while raising concerns about changes to food assistance.
“Although it’s not perfect, it’s something I plan to support,” Rep. Gabe Vasquez, D-N.M., said in an interview ahead of the vote. “Overall, I think it’s a good bill. Clearly, we need to revisit some very serious concerns that many of us have, including myself, as it pertains to cutting some food assistance that we’ll be able to revise once we’re in the majority here in the House.”
A last-minute fight over ethanol policy nearly derailed the effort. Republican leaders had initially folded in a proposal to allow year-round sales of E15 fuel, triggering backlash from lawmakers in oil-producing states. To keep the bill on track, leadership agreed to split the issue off and hold a standalone vote on E15 on May 13, delaying the farm bill’s transmission to the Senate until then.
Now the measure heads into a much tougher battle. The Senate has yet to release its own version or set a firm timeline, and key differences between the chambers could stall momentum yet again.
Senate Agriculture Chairman John Boozman, R-Ark., has already signaled that some of the House bill’s more controversial provisions may be stripped out to meet the Senate’s 60-vote threshold. He told reporters he hopes to move the legislation within a matter of “weeks, not months.”
Farm bills were once routine bipartisan exercises, but negotiations have bogged down in recent years over disputes tied to climate-focused programs and nutrition funding.
Republicans’ broader fiscal push also reshaped the debate. Their One Big Beautiful Bill Act slashed $187 billion from the nation’s largest food aid program while steering $65 billion toward farmer support, a move that drew sharp Democratic opposition but helped pave the way for a budget-neutral farm bill this time around.
Whether that balance can survive the Senate remains the big question.
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