Trump taps Rollins as agriculture chief, completing proposed slate of
Cabinet secretaries
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[November 25, 2024]
By BILL BARROW, ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON and ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump said Saturday that he
will nominate former White House aide Brooke Rollins to be his
agriculture secretary, the last of his picks to lead executive agencies
and another choice from within his established circle of advisers and
allies.
The nomination must be confirmed by the Senate, which will be controlled
by Republicans when Trump takes office Jan. 20, 2025. Rollins would
succeed Tom Vilsack, President Joe Biden’s agriculture secretary who
oversees the sprawling agency that controls policies, regulations and
aid programs related to farming, forestry, ranching, food quality and
nutrition.
Rollins, an attorney who graduated from Texas A&M University with an
undergraduate degree in agricultural development, is a longtime Trump
associate who served as White House domestic policy chief during his
first presidency. The 52-year-old is president and CEO of the America
First Policy Institute, a group helping to lay the groundwork for a
second Trump administration. Rollins previously served as an aide to
former Texas Gov. Rick Perry and ran a think tank, the Texas Public
Policy Foundation. She worked as a litigation attorney in Dallas and
also clerked for a federal judge in the Northern District of Texas after
earning her law degree from the University of Texas.
The pick completes Trump’s selection of the heads of executive branch
departments, just two and a half weeks after the former president won
the White House once again. Several other picks that are traditionally
Cabinet-level remain, including U.S. Trade Representative and head of
the small business administration.
Rollins, speaking on the Christian talk show “Family Talk" earlier this
year, said Trump was an “amazing boss” and confessed that she thought in
2015, during his first presidential campaign that he would not last as a
candidate in a crowded Republican primary field.
“I was the person that said, ‘Oh, Donald Trump is not going to go more
than two or three weeks in the Republican primary. This is to up his TV
show ratings. And then we’ll get back to normal,’” she said. “Fast
forward a couple of years, and I am running his domestic policy agenda.”
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Brooke Rollins speaks at a campaign rally at Madison Square Garden,
Oct. 27, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)
Trump didn’t offer many specifics about his agriculture policies
during the campaign, but farmers could be affected if he carries out
his pledge to impose widespread tariffs. During the first Trump
administration, countries like China responded to Trump’s tariffs by
imposing retaliatory tariffs on U.S. exports like the corn and
soybeans routinely sold overseas. Trump countered by offering
massive multibillion-dollar aid to farmers to help them weather the
trade war.
President Abraham Lincoln founded the USDA in 1862, when about half
of all Americans lived on farms. The USDA oversees multiple support
programs for farmers; animal and plant health; and the safety of
meat, poultry and eggs that anchor the nation’s food supply. Its
federal nutrition programs provide food to low-income people,
pregnant women and young children. And the agency sets standards for
school meals.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of
Health and Human Services, has vowed to strip ultraprocessed foods
from school lunches and to stop allowing Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program beneficiaries from using food stamps to buy soda,
candy or other so-called junk foods. But it would be the USDA, not
HHS, that would be responsible for enacting those changes.
In addition, HHS and USDA will work together to finalize the
2025-2030 edition of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. They are
due late next year, with guidance for healthy diets and standards
for federal nutrition programs.
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Gomez Licon reported from Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Associated
Press writers Josh Funk and JoNel Aleccia contributed to this
report.
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