Trump team talks trade, labor with U.S.
farm groups
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[August 22, 2016]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Advisers to Republican
presidential nominee Donald Trump pledged to U.S. agricultural groups
that he will give growers and states a say on national farm policy
should he be elected, two association leaders said on Friday.
Eleven groups representing farmers, seed companies and other players in
the sector met for the first time with Trump's top agricultural advisers
in Washington on Monday to make recommendations on policy, following a
similar meeting with representatives of rival Democratic nominee Hillary
Clinton in June.
The presidential candidates' agriculture policies are crucial,
agricultural groups say, because net U.S. farm income this year is
forecast to drop to its lowest since 2002, largely due to a decline in
grain prices. If that happens, incomes will be down 56 percent from a
recent high of $123.3 billion in 2013.
For Trump's team, the meeting came as he has tried to be more
disciplined and on message as he seeks to reset his campaign against
Clinton for the Nov. 8 election. He reshuffled top campaign leaders this
week, and on Friday accepted the resignation of campaign chairman Paul
Manafort.
Agricultural trade, labor, crop insurance and food safety were among the
topics discussed at the meeting with farm groups, which included Charles
Herbster, national chairman of Trump's agricultural advisory committee,
and Sam Clovis, Trump's chief policy advisor, participants told Reuters.
Former Nebraska Governor Dave Heineman, who is on Trump's advisory
committee, also attended, they said.
"There was an assertion that farmers will be at the tables to make
decisions, and that was well received by myself and our colleagues,"
said Barb Glenn, chief executive officer of the National Association of
State Departments of Agriculture.
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks at a campaign
rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S., August 18, 2016.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
Also, there was a focus on "the concept that the states need to be
brought in to work with the federal government," she said.
Clinton's campaign staff have previously made similar comments to
farm groups, said Jay Vroom, chief executive officer of pesticide
association CropLife America, who attended meetings with
representatives of both candidates.
"Both of them are quite interested in understanding where American
ag is at," he said.
Trump on Tuesday named 64 people to his agricultural advisory
committee, including six U.S. governors, a former U.S. Department of
Agriculture secretary, and the chairmen of the U.S. House and Senate
agriculture committees.
The latest RealClearPolitics average of national opinion polls puts
Clinton 6 percentage points ahead of Trump, at 47.2 percent to 41.7
percent.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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