HR-8646-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 548.
Sponsored by Andy Harris (R-MD)
What it does
This bill would set discretionary and mandatory spending levels for the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and related agencies for fiscal year 2027. As an annual appropriations bill, it would determine funding amounts for programs covering farm support, rural development, food assistance, food safety, and agricultural research. The full text has not been published, so specific funding levels and any policy riders are not yet available for review.
Who benefits
Farmers and agricultural producers who receive USDA support payments or crop insurance subsidies. Rural communities that depend on USDA rural development loans, grants, and infrastructure programs. Low-income households enrolled in nutrition assistance programs (SNAP, WIC, school meals). Food manufacturers and importers subject to FDA oversight, who gain regulatory certainty. Agricultural researchers at universities and federal labs funded through USDA grants. Rural hospitals and utilities that receive USDA rural development funding.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the cost of federal spending. Programs or agencies whose funding is reduced relative to prior years or requested levels — though specific cuts are unknown without the full text. Competing discretionary spending priorities that may be crowded out. Rural communities or agricultural sectors that receive lower-than-requested funding. FDA-regulated industries facing new compliance requirements if policy riders are included.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that annual agriculture appropriations are essential to maintaining the food supply chain, supporting rural economies, and ensuring food safety oversight that protects all Americans. They contend that USDA and FDA programs — including crop insurance, rural broadband, and SNAP — provide a stable foundation for both agricultural producers and vulnerable households, and that consistent annual funding prevents costly disruptions to these systems.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that annual agriculture appropriations bills frequently include policy riders that bypass the normal legislative process, allowing controversial provisions to be attached to must-pass spending legislation with limited debate. They contend that baseline funding levels for farm subsidies and nutrition programs have grown significantly over time without sufficient scrutiny of program effectiveness, and that the appropriations process itself lacks the transparency and accountability needed for responsible fiscal stewardship.