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Remarks by The
President Upon Signing the Farm Bill
Room 450
Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building
7:46 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Good morning, and welcome to Washington's grand old building, the
Eisenhower Executive Office Building -- or, as we now call it, the Ike.
(Laughter.)
Today's event is being broadcast by Farm Radio to farmers and ranchers all
across our country. Hardworking farmers and ranchers, whether they be from Texas
or Maine, from Mississippi or California, are up early and are working hard. And
this morning I want to talk about the tremendous contributions that
they make, that our farm and ranch families make to America, the support they
deserve, and why I am pleased to sign the Farm Security and Rural Investment Act
of 2002.
I want to thank the members of Congress who are here -- Senator
Harkin, Congressman Combest, the leaders in both the House and the Senate. I
appreciate you all coming. And when I sign this bill, I'd like for you all to
come up here and watch me sign it.
I appreciate Secretary Ann Veneman, who is here. I want to thank her for her
hard work, and her staff for their hard work as well.
And I want to thank the members of the farm and agricultural groups who
represent the people who work the land. I want to thank you all for your efforts
and for your concern.
American farm and ranch families embody some of the best values of our nation:
hard work and risk-taking, love of the land and love of our country.
Farming is the first industry of America -- the industry that feeds us, the
industry that clothes us, and the industry that increasingly provides more of
our energy. The success of America's farmers and ranchers is essential to the
success of the American economy.
I was honored to be the governor of the second-biggest farm state in the union.
I understand how hard farmers have to work to make a living. I know they face
tough challenges.
I recently spent some time with some of my neighbors at the coffee shop in
Crawford, Texas. I know how hard many struggle. Their livelihood depends on
things they cannot control: the weather, crop disease, uncertain pricing.
They need a farm bill that provides support and help when times are tough.
And that is why I'm signing this bill today.
This bill is generous, and will provide a safety net for farmers. And it will
do so without encouraging overproduction and depressing prices. It will allow
farmers and ranchers to plan and operate based on market realities, government
dictates.
In the past, loan rates and minimum price farmers and ranchers received for some
of their commodities were set too high. This practice made the problem worse by
encouraging surplus production, thereby forcing prices lower. This bill better
balances loan rates, and better matches them to market prices.
It reduces government interference in the market, and in farmers' and ranchers'
planting decisions. The farm bill supports our commitment to open trade, and
complies with our obligations to the World Trade Organization.
Americans cannot eat all that America's farmers and ranchers produce. And
therefore, it makes sense to sell more food abroad. Today, 25 percent of U.S.
farm income is generated by exports, which means that access to foreign markets
is crucial to the livelihood of our farmers and ranchers.
Let me put it as plainly as I can: we want to be selling our beef and our corn
and our beans to people around the world who need to eat.
My administration is working hard to open up markets. I told the
people, I said if you give me a chance to be the President, we're not going to
treat our agriculture industry as a secondary citizen when it comes to opening
up markets. And I mean that. I understand how important the farm economy is to
the future of our country.
To help, this new law helps keep our international trade commitments. And that's
important for America to understand. And because I believe the best way to help
our farmers and ranchers is trade, I need trade promotion authority,
particularly from the Senate. The House has passed it; I need it from the
Senate. Soon. (Laughter and applause.)
This bill offers incentives for good conservation practices on working lands.
For farmers and ranchers, for people who make a living on the land, every day is
Earth Day. There's no better stewards of the land than people who rely on the
productivity of the land. And we can work with our farmers and ranchers to help
improve the environment.
To help them live up to the newer and higher environmental standards, this bill
expands the ECP program, which provides financial assistance to our farmers and
ranchers to encourage sound conservation. And the bill will greatly enhance
the abilities of our farmers and ranchers to protect wetlands, water quality,
and wildlife habitat, and that's important.
This bill breaks a bad fiscal habit. In the past, Congress would pass a
multi-year farm bill, and then every year after continue to pass supplemental
bills. These unpredictable supplemental payments made it difficult for Congress
to live within its budget. It also created uncertainty for farmers and ranchers,
and their creditors. This bill is generous enough, the bill I'm going
to sign is generous enough to eliminate the need for supplemental support later
this year and in the future, and therefore adds the kind of reliability that
farmers and ranchers need.
This bill is also a compassionate bill. This law means that legal
immigrants can now receive help and food stamps after being here for five years.
It means that you can have an elderly farm worker, somebody here legally in
America who's worked hard to make a living and who falls on hard times, that
person can receive help from a compassionate government.
It means that you can have a head of a family who's been working hard, been here
for five years, been a part of our economy, been legally working. And that
person falls on hard times, our government should help them with food stamps.
And this bill allows that to happen.
It's not a perfect bill, I know that. But you know, no bill ever is.
There's no such thing as a perfect bill -- otherwise I'd get to write
every one of them. (Laughter.)
You know, for example, I thought it was important to have what they call Farm
Savings Accounts to help farmers and ranchers manage the many risks they face. I
thought that should be an important part of the bill. It didn't happen; I'm
going to continue to work for it, work with the members here on it.
I also believe strongly there's more that we should do for our farm
community. You know, one of the best things we have done for ranchers and
farmers is to eliminate the death tax. It's a really important part of making
sure that farms and ranches stay in our families. The death tax needs to be --
the repeal of the death tax needs to be made permanent. That happened in the
House; I hope it happens in the Senate soon. It's a good signal that we care
deeply about those who live on the land and make a living.
The farm bill is important legislation, and it meets important needs. The bill
will strengthen the farm economy, and that's important. It will strengthen the
farm economy over the long term. It will promote farmer independence, and
preserve the farm way of life for generations. It helps America's farmers, and
therefore it helps America.
It is now my honor to sign the bill. And for any of the members who dare have
their picture taken with me -- (laughter) -- I welcome.
(The bill was signed.) (Applause.)
END 7:57 A.M. EDT
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