Davids Helps Pass Bipartisan Farm Bill to Deliver Stability for Kansas Farmers, Lower Costs for Families
Image April 30, 2026 Press Release Farm Bill included serval Davids-led initiatives to support farmers WASHINGTON, D.C. — Today, Representative Sharice Davids voted to pass the Farm Bill, emphasizing the need to provide certainty for Kansas farmers and address rising costs for families after years of delayed action in Congress. “Kansas farmers and families have been hit over and over again this past year — from unstable markets to rising input costs and the ripple effects of reckless tariffs,” said Davids . “What they need most right now is stability, not uncertainty. This bipartisan Farm Bill moves us toward more predictability for producers, lower costs for everyone, and a system that actually works for the people feeding and fueling this country. We still have work to do to ensure no family goes hungry, but this is a step toward giving farmers and families the certainty they deserve.” Today’s Farm Bill: Supports farmers’ bottom line: Expands access to farm loans, strengthens crop research, and invests in rural development Cuts red tape and boosts innovation: Increases federal support for precision agriculture tools and modern farming practices Protects food security: Adds cybersecurity safeguards for the agriculture and food supply chain Grows rural economies: Supports new markets for American-grown renewable fuels Lowers grocery prices: Strengthens the agricultural supply chain so farmers can produce food more efficiently, helping bring down grocery costs Davids-Led Provisions: Supports Kansas wheat farmers: Requires USDA study on winter wheat as a cover crop to reduce regulatory confusion and improve soil health Fixes Tribal parity gap: Ensures Tribes can access USDA agricultural credit and support programs under the same terms as states Last year’s partisan budget, which Davids voted against, took food off Kansans’ tables by cutting the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) to pay for tax breaks for billionaires. In Kansas’ Third District alone, 8,000 households could lose access to food assistance, and up to 27,000 grocery stores nationwide could close due to lost revenue. These cuts are also reducing farm income by more than $30 billion and threatening good-paying jobs. Davids supported an amendment to today’s Farm Bill that would reverse these reckless cuts, but it was not accepted by the Republican majority. Davids previously went on a Farm Bill listening tour, where she visited a poultry and livestock operation in Anderson County, a co-op in Franklin County, a goat farm in Miami County, an organic vegetable farm in Johnson County, and an educational community farm in Wyandotte County. Davids also toured a Garnett-based renewable ethanol producer , participated in FFA activities at Spring Hill High School, served a school lunch at Black Bob Elementary in Olathe, spoke with industry leaders on financial support programs for farmers, toured a dairy farm in Garnett, and more . Kansas families and farmers are feeling the impact of President Trump’s trade policies. The Budget Lab at Yale estimates the average American household will pay about $2,400 more per year due to tariffs. Davids raised these concerns during a U.S. House Agriculture Committee hearing on trade disruptions — concerns echoed by Kansas Farm Bureau President Joe Newland. Last year, Davids also wrote to the President noting that while short-term support may be necessary, Kansas producers consistently prefer “trade, not aid.” Following continued pressure on farm economies, the President later announced a relief package for farmers affected by tariff-related economic hardship. Issues : Agriculture
9b4794f1-4738-48e4-97aa-511bd7019022Issued within 24 hours
Other senators' releases published in the day before or after this one.