Brooke Rollins confirmed as Trump's agriculture secretary as tariff
fights loom
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[February 14, 2025]
By MATT BROWN and SCOTT McFETRIDGE
WASHINGTON (AP) — Conservative lawyer Brooke Rollins was confirmed
Thursday as secretary of agriculture, placing a close ally of President
Donald Trump into a key Cabinet position at a time when mass deportation
plans could lead to farm labor shortages and tariffs could hit
agricultural exports.
Rollins, who served as chief for domestic policy during Trump's first
administration, was confirmed overwhelmingly by the Senate in a 72-28
vote.
Rollins will now lead a department tasked with overseeing nearly all
aspects of the nation's food system, including standards on farming
practices and livestock rearing, federal subsidies to farmers or
agribusinesses and setting nutrition standards for schools and public
health officials nationwide.
The Department of Agriculture was at the center of Trump's trade war in
his last administration, when it increased subsidies to farmers growing
the nation's two biggest crops, corn and soybeans, after retaliatory
tariffs were levied by China on the grains and international markets
were disrupted. The United States is the world's largest food exporter.
In her Senate confirmation hearing, Rollins acknowledged that Trump’s
plans for the mass deportation of people in the country illegally could
led to farm labor shortages. Growers of some vegetables and crops such
as apples as well as dairy operations are especially dependent on
migrant labor.
But Rollins said Americans support Trump’s plans and she would work to
help the president while also trying to protect farmers.
“The president’s vision of a secure border and a mass deportation at a
scale that matters is something I support,” Rollins said.
Rollins is a conservative legal activist and public policy analyst who
most recently served as president and CEO of the America First Policy
Institute, a Trump-aligned think tank that developed policy and
cultivated a network of personnel for the second Trump administration.
Other AFPI alumni in the administration include the group's chair, Linda
McMahon, who was tapped to lead the Education Department, Attorney
General Pam Bondi, Housing and Urban Development Secretary Scott Turner
and Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins, among others.
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Rollins served as acting director of the White House Domestic Policy
Council during Trump’s first term, where she oversaw a portfolio
that included agriculture policy. She also served as president of
the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank.
Rollins' nomination was unanimously approved by the Senate's
agriculture committee. Sen. Jim Justice, R-W.Va., called Rollins a
“superstar” while Rollins' home state senators, Sens. Ted Cruz and
John Cornyn, testified on her behalf ahead of her confirmation
hearing.
Rollins promised to “modernize” USDA in line with Trump's vision for
the department that included faster procession of disaster aid for
farmers and tackling animal diseases. She also vowed to “immediately
begin to modernize, realign, rethink the United States Department of
Agriculture" on policies like remote work, in line with the Trump
administration's broader stance.
Democrats expressed concern that federal funding freezes had
disrupted aid to farmers and land grant universities and pressed
Rollins on how her support for farming communities may clash with
Trump's immigration and trade agenda.
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Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., the ranking member of the agriculture
committee, pressed Rollins on how she would respond to retaliatory
tariffs on U.S. crops, given Trump's previous trade wars.
“Beyond just getting extra payments to make up for it, will you be a
voice to make sure people understand the importance of exports for
rural America? And it’s not just farming but manufacturing and the
like,” Klobuchar asked.
Rollins promised that her team “would be at the table fighting for
what we believe is necessary for these communities.
“Of all of the portfolio that, if confirmed, I am taking on, the one
that excites me the most is the opportunity to put forward a vision
and build a program around revivifying, restoring and bringing back
rural America,” Rollins said. She cautioned that “clearly, the
federal government itself can't do that” but said that an “all
approach” would be needed to help rural communities.
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McFetridge reported from Des Moines, Iowa.
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