Budd and Rouzer urge Trump to protect NC tobacco farmers | Eastern NC Now

On Oct 28, Sen. Ted Budd, R-NC, joined Rep. David Rouzer, R-CD07, in leading a bipartisan effort in Congress to urge President Donald Trump to prioritize flue-cured tobacco in his upcoming meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

ENCNow
    Publisher's Note: This post appears here courtesy of the Carolina Journal. The author of this post is Katherine Zehnder.

    On Oct 28, Sen. Ted Budd, R-NC, joined Rep. David Rouzer, R-CD07, in leading a bipartisan effort in Congress to urge President Donald Trump to prioritize flue-cured tobacco in his upcoming meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    China is the leading international purchaser of American flue-cured tobacco. Farmers were recently notified that China will not buy flue-cured tobacco from the 2025 crop, a move widely seen as an attempt to gain leverage in ongoing trade negotiations with the United States. This decision leaves approximately 65 million pounds of tobacco without a buyer, resulting in an estimated $220 million in lost export value.

    "Chinese buyers have delayed or refused to pay for purchased 2024 tobacco leaf, including the refusal of shipments from earlier this year," wrote lawmakers. "The impact on rural communities will be devastating, forcing growers out of tobacco production and threatening the stability of other crops, which depend on tobacco revenues to keep production going. Global competitors such as Brazil and India will quickly fill the gap, displacing U.S. farmers. We urge you to remedy China's trade practices and ensure our growers maintain this important market."

    The letter uses data to demonstrate how the 2018 tariffs administered by Trump impacted US tobacco exports.

    "In 2017, the U.S. exported more than 62 million pounds of flue-cured tobacco to China," continued lawmakers. "By 2019, that number collapsed to 513,000 pounds. When access to foreign markets disappears, relief programs become the only lifeline on which farmers can rely on."

    Lawmakers emphasized the need for "fair compensation commensurate with the aid provided to other crops," according to the letter, asserting that rural communities "lacking fair compensation" could be "left behind without any way to recover."

    Lawmakers urged Trump to coordinate with his administration to guarantee that flue-cured tobacco farmers would be eligible for any "upcoming trade relief program."

    In an Oct 1 Truth Social Post, Trump committed to prioritizing soybeans in his meeting with Jinping.

    China is the world's leading international buyer of soybeans, as well as tobacco. Tobacco farmers deserve appropriate consideration in these critical meetings.

    In the letter, lawmakers reminded Trump that rural American voters supported him for many reasons, including his commitment to stand with farmers and rural businesses against unfair trade practices. They requested that he provide stability for tobacco farmers by ensuring that flue-cured tobacco receives fair treatment in trade negotiations with China and all other countries.

HbAD0

    Lawmakers also urged him to ensure that any future relief programs include flexibility to assist tobacco growers, to minimize the importation of cheap, foreign-grown tobacco that undermines our farmers, and to work with his administration to promote the US tobacco leaf to the fullest extent allowed by the Doggett Amendment. Historically, the amendment has limited access to international markets for tobacco farmers.

    Co-signers on the letter include Sens. Thom Tillis, R-NC, and Lindsey Graham, R-SC, as well as Reps. Don Davis, D-CD01, Chuck Edwards, R-CD11, Virginia Foxx, R-CD05, Pat Harrigan, R-CD10, Mark Harris, R-CD08, Richard Hudson, R-CD09, Brad Knott, R-CD13, Addison McDowell, R-CD06, Tim Moore, R-CD14, Greg Murphy, R-CD03, H. Griffith, R-VA09, Jennifer Kiggans, R-VA02, John McGuire, R-VA05, Russell Fry, R-SC07.

poll#218
Now that President Trump is picking his cabinet and immediate staff to insulate him from the poor judgement of the Bureaucratic Class, while moving quickly to transition this Constitutional Republic unto a wise and sustainable direction: What is your immediate impression as to how our nation will prosper?
  We are headed toward a Golden Age in America's self-governed society.
  This will all wind up in a clustered mess since Trump is a Fascist, and thought to be the second coming of Adolf Hitler by our best journalists.
  This is a time where critical days lay ahead, where only wise and responsible decisions must be made to sustain US.
  I generally do not pay attention, but expect only the best to occur ... and that is what I always expect.
160 total vote(s)     What's your Opinion?

Go Back

HbAD1

Latest State and Federal

Tax Day is a week away, and the reports are in: North Carolinians are winning big with record-setting tax returns thanks to President Trump and Republicans' Working Families Tax Cuts.
“It is a trust fund, a piece of the American economy for every child that they will be able to take out when they are 18.”
For most of her life, Zofia Cheeseman built her life and schedule around being a gymnast until a health scare forced her to look at her life off the mat.
"We could very well end up having a friendly takeover of Cuba."

HbAD2

You can't make this up. If you turned this script into Hollywood, they'd say it's too on the nose.
"Alaska native" firms, most often in Virginia, were paid $45 billion in Pentagon contracts thanks to DEI law.
Small cities rarely make headlines. Their struggles - fiscal mismanagement, leadership vacuums, the slow erosion of public trust - play out in school gymnasiums and wood-paneled council chambers, witnessed by a handful of residents and largely ignored by the world outside.
"Go that way and get down ... there has been a shooting ... there are people dead over here."
Former provost Chris Clemens has dropped his open meetings and public records lawsuit against the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

HbAD3

How the Minnesota Senate race became a purity test for the far Left

HbAD4

 
 
Back to Top