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With Trump's subsidy, farmers grow distrustful of simple solutions

Ruben Navarrette Jr. on

Besides, the proposed farm subsidy is guilt money. The only reason the assistance is even on the table is because Trump fired the first shots of a global trade war with China, Canada, Mexico and Europe by imposing tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, which invited the targeted nations to retaliate with tariffs on U.S. farm products.

Because Trump can't admit fault, he is spinning the retaliatory tariffs as an unprovoked attack on farmers by foreign powers.

Nonsense. The foreign tariffs are in self-defense. Trump started this shoving match.

To help convince farmers that his aid offer is on the level, the President has even gone to the trouble of printing up green baseball caps that read "Make Our Farmers Great Again!"

Get a load of this city slicker. He doesn't get it. Farmers don't need to be made great again. They already are great. It's their political leadership that often falls short.

Trump has promised farm groups that his tariffs will ultimately benefit their industry if they can "just be a little patient."

Too bad farmers can't use patience to pay the mortgage, buy feed, get a truck, fix the tractor or purchase groceries in hard times.

Actually, I think farmers -- many of whom lean conservative and voted for Trump -- have been mighty patient as they wait for any evidence at all that their trust wasn't misplaced.

So far, the administration has been -- on multiple fronts -- about as friendly to farming as a plague of locusts.

 

Besides the chaos created by tariffs, its nativist-fueled crackdown on illegal immigrants has scared off foreign workers and made it nearly impossible for farmers to find field hands.

Wages are rising because the workers who remain have their choice of jobs. Why pick tomatoes -- even for the unusually high wage of $25 per hour -- if you can build homes for twice that amount? According to media reports, avocado growers on the California coast are paying pickers as much as $400 per day; and they still can't find qualified and willing workers to bring in the crop.

Meanwhile, the Republican majority in Congress -- which enables Trump by making excuses for his incompetence -- seems to have no interest in passing legislation that would help farmers find workers to bring in the harvest. They won't legalize the undocumented, or import a new batch of temporary guest workers. They've spent years fleecing farmers, and now they offer nothing.

Subsidies are easy to promise. Solutions are harder to come by. Politicians are no help to farmers, many of whom would probably - right about now - prefer the locusts.

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Ruben Navarrette's email address is ruben@rubennavarrette.com. His daily podcast, "Navarrette Nation," is available through every podcast app.

(c) 2018, The Washington Post Writers Group


 

 

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