WASHINGTON – Amid angry outbursts, the Republican-run House on Thursday passed a farm bill that would break a decades-old bond between the country's farm and nutrition programs.
By a 216-208 margin that included not a single Democratic yes vote, the GOP passed a five-year farm bill that does not include the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, commonly known as food stamps.
Rep. Tim Walz, whose congressional district spans a heavily agricultural southern swath of Minnesota, called the bill an "abomination." Walz, a Democratic member of the House Agriculture Committee, read names from a list of more than 530 farm, conservation and rural development organizations that opposed the legislation.
While 12 Republicans voted against splitting food stamps from the farm bill, all three of Minnesota's Republican representatives sided with their party leaders.
"I don't understand the no votes, because whether you like it or not, you've got to have farm policy, and you've got to move the process forward," Republican Rep. John Kline said in an interview.
The food stamp program is protected by law, so it would take specific legislation to kill it. But the program's supporters saw its separation from the farm bill as a first step toward big cuts.
Rep. Collin Peterson, D-Minn., the ranking minority member of the Agriculture Committee, helped fashion a bipartisan farm bill that was voted down two weeks ago. Peterson led the opposition Thursday, chiding GOP leaders for orchestrating what he called the most divisive political move of his nearly 40 years in politics.
"You have made me a partisan," Peterson, an avowed moderate, told his Republican colleagues. "That's a hard thing to do."