Ang pagpili ng Tamang Kalihim ng US ng Agrikultura ay Kinukuha ang Atensyon na Kinakailangan nito

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Prediction: Nobody will be talking about the Trump administration’s lack of an agriculture secretary a month or two from now.

sa halip, we’ll be amazed at how much President Trump has accomplished for farmers and ranchers.

On the eve of Friday’s presidential inauguration, it’s possible, as always, to get caught up in the obsessions of the moment—the little controversies that drive disputes on Twitter and then melt away like a dusting of snow.

It’s the result of too much living in the now. As a new president enters the White House this weekend, we should fix our attention on the future.

This is precisely what Donald Trump has been doing. He owes his election to Americans who live in middle America and rural America, to the producers and manufacturers who put food on our tables every day—and he’s building what may be the best administration farmers and ranchers ever have known.

It begins with his big-picture ideas. President-Elect Trump is committed to real economic growth. He supports fundamental tax reform and doesn’t believe death should be a taxable event—a major issue for farmers and ranchers who want to keep their sons and daughters in agriculture. He also supports private-property rights and will nominate a Supreme Court justice who agrees.

He won’t just get government out of our pockets—he’ll get it off our backs with regulatory relief, starting with the Environmental Protection Agency’s Obama-era land-grab known as the “Waters of the United States” rule, which he will either withdraw or revise.

President-Elect Trump believes in the freedom to farm and will prevent states from trying to dictate the decisions of food producers in other parts of the country. He’ll work to promote energy independence, bringing jobs to rural areas, promoting biofuels, and reducing the fuel costs of farming and ranching.

Trump made all of this clear during his campaign, which is why he won so much support from the agriculture and rural sector.

Since his election, he has started to make good on his promises through a series of excellent nominations.

I am confident Scott Pruitt will bring common sense and sound science back to the EPA. Rick Perry will offer a producer’s outlook at the Department of Energy. Ryan Zinke will introduce rational land-use policies to the Department of the Interior.

I’m even encouraged about trade—an area in which President-Elect Trump has caused concern among farmers and ranchers, who rely on strong export markets and seek expanded opportunities abroad rather than protectionism at home.

Reports suggest that President-Elect Trump will weaken the Office of the U.S. Kinatawan ng Kalakal, the headquarters of America’s trade diplomats. The agency may not pursue new trade agreements with the vigor of previous administrations, but it will be well aware of how much farmers and ranchers depend on foreign customers.

I suspect that President-Elect Trump will continue to talk tough on trade even as some of his actual positions soften. The selection of Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad as his Ambassador to China proves that whatever happens, agriculture will have a strong voice in every discussion that involves one of America’s most important trading partners.

One of Branstad’s predecessors as Governor of Iowa, syempre, is Tom Vilsack, the outgoing Secretary of Agriculture. Mas maaga sa linggong ito, Secretary Vilsack criticized Trump for not having selected his own Secretary of Agriculture.

I’m as eager as anybody for President-Elect Trump to make his pick, but I’m also not alarmed by the delay. sa katunayan, I’m encouraged by how much effort he appears to have put into the choice of a person who will oversee an array of programs and a budget of $150 bilyon. He has interviewed a long list of candidates—perhaps more than he has for any other cabinet position. Many of the contenders look like outstanding possibilities.

Whatever might be said of the fact that President-Elect Trump still has not nominated a Secretary of Agriculture, it’s impossible to charge him with neglecting the office. Rather, he’s giving it the care it deserves.

We’re going to get a superb Secretary of Agriculture. It’s just a matter of time—and pretty soon we’ll stop fretting over a late appointment and instead recognize the achievements of an administration that makes America great again for farmers and ranchers and everybody.

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Tandaan: Sonny Perdue has now been formally announced as the nominee for the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture as of Thursday 19 Enero. Perdue has been an agribusiness owner, a veterinarian, and served as Georgia Governor from 2003 sa 2011. This background brings abundant knowledge and real-world common sense to an incredibly important department on which the success of the nation depends.

Carol Keizer
SINULAT NI

Carol Keizer

Si Carol ay nagsusuot ng maraming mga sumbrero sa industriya ng pagkain at agrikultura sa kanyang buhay. Ngunit ang kanyang pag-iibigan ay palaging umiikot sa mga baka at mentoring sa susunod na henerasyon ng mga pinuno ng agrikultura, samakatuwid ay gumaganap ng isang bahagi sa paghubog ng patakaran na nakakaapekto sa pagkain, agrikultura at pamamahala ng negosyo sa parehong antas ng Pambansa at Internasyonal. Tumawag si Carol at ang kanyang pamilya sa bahay ng Illinois para sa karamihan ng kanyang karera, ngunit ang kanyang saklaw ng pamumuno at paglahok ay naging anupaman ngunit lokal.

Nakatuon ngayon si Carol sa kasalukuyang mga isyu ng interes sa aming Global Farmer Network na may kaugnayan sa pagbabago, pagpapanatili at pinahahalagahan kalakal ng pulang karne at iba pang mga produktong hayupan.

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  1. Let us support the nomination of Sonny Purdue for US Sec of Agriculture and promote the opportunity to explore best alternatives and changes to enhance international trade that will express best results for all global partnerships. I believe where there is a will there certainly is a way.