Secure domestic supplies more important than ever                                                   
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June 4, 2020

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Covid-19 food supply disruptions threaten foreign dumping of agriculture, hurting U.S. farmers and ranchers
Americans were stunned in late March and throughout most of April and May that many of the shelves that normally carried staples at the grocery store were empty.  This, more than any other image, stunned many as it demonstrated the fragility of our nation’s supply chains and the potential dangers to food supplies. One part of the grocery store that recovered rapidly was the baking section, in particular, the availability of sugar.  This is not because the U.S. sugar industry was not impacted, but rather because the U.S sugar industry is vertically integrated and geographically disperse, and  so sugar producers could halt the normal bulk shipments to restaurants and other mass users, and ramp up production of smaller bags found on the grocery shelves in almost immediate response to the change in demand. This is in contrast to how supply shortages and changed consumer behavior devastated many other aisles at the grocery store, ranging from flour to the meat counter. All the while, domestic supply disruptions have led directly to a surge in food imports to the U.S., according to March data from the U.S. Census Bureau, with a year to date increase of 3 percent in the first three months of 2020. This makes U.S. agriculture particularly vulnerable to lost market share as some U.S. producers shutter operations, others have to destroy crops they can’t get to market, and foreign competitors look to take advantage. But, does it make sense for the United States to become more dependent on others for food?

Are riots, looting, and lawlessness shifting minority voters toward Trump?
While the radical left is seizing on the death of George Floyd to hurl blame at President Trump, new polling shows Trump’s compassionate response to the tragedy, distinction between peaceful protesters and terrorist groups like Antifa, and his measured response to defend the law is raising his approval ratings with minorities. YouGov polling from last week before the chaos ensued showed President Trump’s approval rating at 39 percent among Hispanics, and 12 percent among Blacks. New polling taken between Saturday and Monday as the riots escalated shows his approval rating with Hispanics rose to 42 percent and with African Americans rose to 18 percent.

Rosenstein admits FBI hid exculpatory info in FISA renewals
Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning: "Rod Rosenstein's bombshell admission that he was wrong in signing the FISA renewals on Carter Page, based on the Horowitz report findings of misconduct and deception and withheld information is incredible. If Rosenstein is telling the truth that ,the origins of the Steele dossier and its veracity were withheld from him by the FBI, as the AG responsible for the investigation, and due to that he signed the FISA warrant under false pretenses, this would provide one more example of the top leadership at the FBI engaging in a wholesale of coverup of exculpatory information in order to overturn the results of the 2016 election. Rosenstein's testimony puts former FBI Director James Comey, Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and former Agent Peter Strzok squarely in the legal hot seat. This must never happen again and Congress is duty bound to ensure that any FISA reform meets that standard."


 

Covid-19 food supply disruptions threaten foreign dumping of agriculture, hurting U.S. farmers and ranchers

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By Rick Manning

Americans were stunned in late March and throughout most of April and May that many of the shelves that normally carried staples at the grocery store were empty.  This, more than any other image, stunned many as it demonstrated the fragility of our nation’s supply chains and the potential dangers to food supplies.

One part of the grocery store that recovered rapidly was the baking section, in particular, the availability of sugar.  This is not because the U.S. sugar industry was not impacted, but rather because the U.S sugar industry is vertically integrated and geographically disperse, and  so sugar producers could halt the normal bulk shipments to restaurants and other mass users, and ramp up production of smaller bags found on the grocery shelves in almost immediate response to the change in demand.

This is in contrast to how supply shortages and changed consumer behavior devastated many other aisles at the grocery store, ranging from flour to the meat counter.

All the while, domestic supply disruptions have led directly to a surge in food imports to the U.S., according to March data from the U.S. Census Bureau, with a year to date increase of 3 percent in the first three months of 2020. More data will become available when the April report is released on June 4.

This makes U.S. agriculture particularly vulnerable to lost market share as some U.S. producers shutter operations, others have to destroy crops they can’t get to market, and foreign competitors look to take advantage. But, does it make sense for the United States to become more dependent on others for food? Again, sugar provides a powerful case study.

More than a decade ago, the European Union ended their domestic sugar supports opening them to a flood of subsidized imported sugar.  Ever since, prices there have fluctuated wildly. The immediate surge of subsidized sugar imports sent prices tumbling and bankrupted EU producers. Then, when the global sugar glut tightened as more countries used sugar for ethanol, EU prices spiked because they lost so much domestic supply. Now, prices have again fallen as the EU to re-subsidized its sugar industry to aid in rebuilding – to the detriment of taxpayers.

A similar change to U.S. sugar policy right now would be sure to yield similar results. Brazil is again stockpiling sugar as cheap oil has curbed the appetite for cheap ethanol. And the number-two global exporter, India, continues to increase sugar subsidies that fuel overproduction.

Adding to the domestic food supply challenge, the U.S. dollar has never been stronger on a trade-weighted basis as central banks and financial institutions flood into treasuries markets, acting as an additional major subsidy for foreign producers shipping to the U.S. including agriculture.

The stronger the dollar relative to trade partner currencies, the cheaper imports become, and the more expensive exports out of the U.S. economy become.

That is why the Trump administration, including the U.S. Trade Representative, ought to advocate at the World Trade Organization for a zero for zero end to global agriculture subsidies and to stop the dumping into U.S. markets with an initial focus on sugar. In a reciprocal manner, when foreign government stop subsidizing their food products, we’ll stop subsidizing ours.

A similar approach has been adopted by U.S. Rep. Ted Yoho (R-Fla.), who has legislation to codify such an approach to sugar policy into federal law, allowing President Trump to say to world leaders that the law is in place to end U.S. subsidies as soon as the WTO certifies that foreign competitors have ended theirs.  A common-sense solution that ensures that agriculture markets actually become free but also are fair.

All told, these subsidized supplies and increased subsidization threaten U.S. farmers through the dumping of foreign crops onto the U.S. market. The Trump administration should be watchful during this pandemic for this exact kind of subsidized dumping, and take aggressive actions as become necessary.

We are best when subsidies are removed, and our producers behave like businesses — investing in efficiencies and supply chain improvements that benefit us all. But to get there will require reciprocal action by the U.S. and trade partners working in concert. Representative Yoho’s Zero for Zero legislation is the right step toward achieving this obvious objective.

Rick Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.


Are riots, looting and lawlessness shifting minority voters toward Trump?

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By Manzanita Miller

While the radical left is seizing on the death of George Floyd to hurl blame at President Trump, new polling shows Trump’s compassionate response to the tragedy, distinction between peaceful protesters and terrorist groups like Antifa, and his measured response to defend the law is raising his approval ratings with minorities.

YouGov polling from last week before the chaos ensued showed President Trump’s approval rating at 39 percent among Hispanics, and 12 percent among Blacks. New polling taken between Saturday and Monday as the riots escalated shows his approval rating with Hispanics rose to 42 percent and with African Americans rose to 18 percent, as shown below.

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President Trump’s ‘strong approval’ numbers increased for both groups as well. His strong approval went from 17 percent to 28 percent with Hispanics and from 7 percent to 11 percent with African Americans over between May 25th and June 1st.

Trump also gained a bump in the West, where his numbers generally trail the rest of the country. Pre-riots, Trump’s support in the West stood at 41 percent, but several days into the lawlessness that rocked Western cities from Seattle to Portland to Oakland, and his support had climbed to 45 percent as shown below.

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President Trump has consistently shown compassion and sensitivity, promising justice for Floyd’s family, and separating peaceful protesters from radical mobs that are co-opting the protests. His May 30th statement calling for arrests of criminals was viewed positively by West Coasters and minorities alike. Fifty-six percent of West Coasters viewed the President’s statement favorably. Over half of Hispanics (52 percent) and 20 percent of African Americans also viewed the statement favorably, as shown below.

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George Floyd’s death is a tragedy and exposes a flaw in our justice system that must absolutely be remedied if we are to keep the peace and restore civility. President Trump has promised to make every effort to ensure justice is served for George and his family, but he has made it equally clear America will not tolerate anarchy, theft, and property destruction. He has made a clear distinction in his rhetoric between peaceful protestors rightfully calling out a great injustice, and self-serving mobs looking for an opportunity to incite fear and chaos. In his speech Monday night addressing the riots, Trump said:

“All Americans are rightly sickened and revolted by the brutal death of George Floyd. My administration is fully committed that for George and his family, justice will be served. He will not have died in vain.

“But we cannot allow the righteous prize and peaceful protesters to be drowned out by an angry mob. The biggest victims of the rioting are peace loving citizens in our poorest communities, and as they are President, I will fight to keep them safe. I will fight to protect you. I am your President of law and order and an ally of all peaceful protesters.”

It is important to ask why Black Americans are expected to support a progressive agenda of unchecked power despite clear abuses of said power. Hispanic and Black Americans, many of whom find their communities destroyed, are not buying the mainstream narrative that Trump is to blame for the lawlessness that has reigned over the past few days. Instead, early polling indicates minorities favor Trump’s measured response to defend the law.

Manzanita Miller is an associate analyst with the Market Research Foundation.


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Rosenstein admits FBI hid exculpatory info in FISA renewals

June 3, 2020, Fairfax, Va.--Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement in response to former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein's statement that he "would not" have signed the FISA renewal warrants against Carter Page had he known that Christopher Steele's source for his dossier had contradicted Steele's false allegations of a Trump-Russia conspiracy:

"Rod Rosenstein's bombshell admission that he was wrong in signing the FISA renewals on Carter Page, based on the Horowitz report findings of misconduct and deception and withheld information is incredible. If Rosenstein is telling the truth that ,the origins of the Steele dossier and its veracity were withheld from him by the FBI, as the AG responsible for the investigation, and due to that he signed the FISA warrant under false pretenses, this would provide one more example of the top leadership at the FBI engaging in a wholesale of coverup of exculpatory information in order to overturn the results of the 2016 election.

"Rosenstein's testimony puts former FBI Director James Comey, Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and former Agent Peter Strzok squarely in the legal hot seat. This must never happen again and Congress is duty bound to ensure that any FISA reform meets that standard."

To view online: https://getliberty.org/2020/06/rosenstein-admits-fbi-hid-exculpatory-info-in-fisa-renewals/

 




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