MORGAN, MINN. - Under the big tent at Farmfest, Minnesota's U.S. Senate candidates found the closest thing to a level playing field that they might see in what so far has been a lopsided contest.
Incumbent Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar, leading in polls and with millions of dollars in the bank, took the stage Wednesday with Republican challenger Kurt Bills and Independence Party candidate Glen Menze.
It was the first time the Senate candidates have met on the same stage and Klobuchar was quick to draw contrasts. She sits on the Senate Agriculture Committee and had worked to pass the farm bill. "I did support the Senate farm bill, from beginning to end," she said, noting that she worked with Republicans from neighboring farm states to push the bill.
"We worked together on this farm bill and that's what Minnesota wants. ... Not supporting the Senate farm bill leaves you with nothing to move forward on in terms of a long-term, five-year, consistent investment horizon for our farmers."
The bill, she noted, already contains $23 billion in cuts, compared with the previous farm bill.
Bills, a high school economics teacher and first-term state representative, told the crowd that he would have voted against the massive farm measure now stalled in Congress, even though it includes vital drought assistance for the nation's parched farmlands.
"It's difficult to be the guy who says 'No, we can't, no, we can't,'" Bills said. " ... I'm on a mission to stop the debt. We can't pay for everything."
Bills said he'd like to go through the massive farm bill "line by line" and start trimming. He declined to give a number, but he said the federal farm bill's primary use should be crop insurance, loan support and conservation. "Maybe that money isn't being well spent, especially when it's benefiting multi-billion-dollar organizations," he said. "Not for the big guy. For the little guy."