Tiktok video: https://www.tiktok.com/@cattlemenfamilyfarms/video/7467698017559170350
Bsky post: https://bsky.app/profile/thetnholler.bsky.social/post/3lhrdl5nt222s
Articles:
- https://www.ft.com/content/bed728f5-e832-4c1d-8c1f-791b574ccb4c?sharetype=gift
- https://www.politico.com/news/2025/02/06/trump-california-water-policy-farmers-00202751
spoiler
ft.com US farmers ‘prepare for the worst’ in new Trump trade war Guy Chazan 7–9 minutes
Aaron Lehman’s soyabean farm in the heartland of Iowa feels like an oasis of calm in the turbulence and tumult of President Donald Trump’s second term. Yet all that could change in a matter of weeks.
Lehman is bracing himself for the impact of a potential trade war hatched in Washington that he says could lay low the US corn belt and irreparably harm America’s standing with its neighbours.
“Farmers understand that trading relationships go up on a stairway, where you work hard to build them up, but go down on an elevator — very, very fast,” Lehman said in the living room of his farmhouse about 20 miles north of Iowa’s capital Des Moines.
“The long-term effect is that countries around the world will no longer see us as a reliable partner.”
It has been a turbulent week in US trade policy. Trump announced last weekend that he would impose 25 per cent tariffs on Mexico and Canada, saying they were not doing enough to stem the flow of migrants and the illicit drug fentanyl into the US. Then after last-minute talks with the two countries’ leaders, he agreed to give them both a 30-day reprieve.
The same was not the case for China. The 10 per cent levy he imposed on all Chinese imports still stands. And many in Iowa believe it is only a matter of time before the tariffs on America’s northern and southern neighbours are reinstated.
The opening salvo of a new trade war has sent a chill through the Midwest. Canada, Mexico and China together account for half of all American agricultural exports. Just last year, the US sold more than $30bn in farm products to Mexico, $29bn to Canada and $26bn to China, according to American Farm Bureau statistics.
Suddenly, farmers were facing the spectre of retaliatory tariffs and the prospect of a full-scale conflict that some fear could decimate America’s rural heartland. Two large grain silos and an old shed sit on a dry, grassy area with expansive flat fields in the background under a partly cloudy sky Farmers fear a full-scale trade war could decimate America’s rural heartland © Amir Prellberg/FT
Farmers in an area of the country that has become a bedrock of support for Trump now worry that the president’s tariffs, though suspended at the last minute, have permanently damaged the image of the US in the eyes of its most important trading partners.
“We’ve gone from being a seller of choice to a seller of last resort,” said Mark Mueller, a farmer from near Waterloo in north-east Iowa.
Few US states better embody the agricultural wealth of the Midwest than Iowa. It is a land of vast corn fields stretching as far as the eye can see, the landscape broken by the occasional grain silo, hay bale or low-slung barn. Hogs outnumber people more than seven to one.
It is also Trump country. Although Iowa voted for Democratic presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, it backed Trump in 2016, 2020 and 2024 in ever greater numbers.
More than a fifth of Iowa’s economy — or $53.1bn — is tied to agriculture, from crop and livestock production to food processing and manufacturing. It is the country’s largest producer of corn, hogs, eggs and ethanol and a top-three grower of soyabeans. That makes it particularly vulnerable to any downturn in agricultural exports.
“Free trade is the backbone of the economy in the Midwest,” said Ernie Goss, an economist at Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska. “What we have here is some of the most productive agriculture on the face of the Earth, and the domestic market is not even close to being big enough to absorb all the commodities produced here. You have to have international markets.” Aaron Lehman is seated near a window inside a room, wearing glasses and a checkered shirt ‘The long-term effect is that countries around the world will no longer see us as a reliable partner,’ said Aaron Lehman © Amir Prellberg/FT
The latest volley of tariff threats has evoked painful memories of the trade war unleashed by Trump in his first term. Among the most striking moves was Trump imposing duties on $300bn of Chinese goods. Beijing responded in 2018 by slapping 25 per cent tariffs on imports of US soyabeans, beef, pork, wheat, corn and sorghum.
The skirmish ended with the countries signing a trade deal in 2020 under which Beijing pledged to increase its purchases of US goods and services. But since then, it has been buying more grain from countries such as Argentina and Brazil, which overtook the US as China’s top supplier of corn in 2023.
In the last trade war, “a lot of our Asian buyers started developing relationships with soyabean producers in South America, and they’ve taken more and more of our market”, said Lehman, who is also president of the Iowa Farmers Union. “And we haven’t got it back.”
Not all of Iowa’s farmers oppose the way Trump has used the threat of tariffs to achieve a key policy objective — stemming illegal immigration.
“It was a strategy he needed to use to . . . get those countries to the negotiating table,” said Steve Kuiper, a fourth-generation Iowa farmer who grows corn and soyabeans in Marion County, south-east of Des Moines. After all, “a president has just four years to accomplish all he’s promised to do, so he’s got to get things going immediately to gain traction”.
Still, he is pessimistic that Mexico and Canada will be able to deliver on their pledges to Trump to strengthen border security in time. “It takes forever for these things to happen, and they’ve only got 30 days,” he said. A view through a window shows a barren soybean field The latest volley of tariff threats has evoked painful memories of the trade war unleashed by Donald Trump in his first term © Amir Prellberg/FT
The prospect of another round of trade tensions comes with American farmers already in a tight spot, hit by a fall in crop prices and higher costs. Net farm income, a broad measure of profits, was $181.9bn in 2022 but is projected to have been $140.7bn in 2024, according to data from the US Department of Agriculture — a 23 per cent slump.
“This [trade war] isn’t coming at a good time,” said Rick Juchems, a farmer from near Plainfield in north-east Iowa. “Commodity prices are low and the price of inputs like seed and fertiliser is going up.” Sources from the Iowa Corn Growers Association said many farmers had been producing at a $100 per acre loss.
Investments in new equipment are down, reflecting the wider downturn, said Juchems. “I’ve got friends who’ve lost their jobs selling agricultural machinery because of reduced demand. The lots are full of unsold tractors.”
Makers of farm equipment such as Deere, Kinze Manufacturing and Bridgestone/Firestone have shed hundreds of jobs in Iowa since last year.
Yet the prospects for farm finances could get even gloomier if Trump makes good on his threat of import levies. Fertiliser, for example, could become much more expensive, since more than 80 per cent of the US’s supply of potash — a key ingredient — comes from Canada.
But perhaps the most destructive effect of the tariff debate is the uncertainty it has triggered, just ahead of the crucial spring planting season.
“We’ll get by as long as we know what’s coming,” said Juchems. “But things are changing all the time. I’m sure the whole world is laughing at us.”
Lehman said farmers were trying to stay optimistic. “They tell me they’re hopeful cooler heads will prevail and this dispute will result in good trade agreements,” said Lehman. “But they’re also preparing for the worst.”
These people feed us, unless you want to rely only on corporate farming, who will rely on 14th amendment prison workers, or slavery, in simple terms.
They're the ones who keep voting for these policies that punish them. Can't reason with masochists.
Yet you're short-sighted enough to kneel to corporate farming. 🤷♀️
Lol sure, that informed commenter is the one kneeling to corporate farming. Not the farmer who actively voted against his own interest and is now gonna suffer the consequences.
Pretty sure I can safely assume the person you replied to didn't vote for Trump or any of this shit.
My point is, it's playing into the divide. An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.
And letting people kill you without accountability for their actions because you think soft words will prevail is entirely delusional. Are you like this because it's not Your Ass they are currently trying to deport citizen or not?
Lol. Some people can't see the forest for the trees, and some can't see the trees for the forest. I'm pretty sure I'm disposable.
Your whole rhetoric is lost in the woods, that's for sure.
We already do.
These idiots voted to give their struggling farms to the mega corps, sucks to suck.
Now if you want to talk about how it's unfair that the non-fascist farmers are caught up in this, they have my sympathy.
Good luck rebuilding the nation.
They're called Mexicans, they're usually a lot more pleasant to work with and their food is better too.
Verdad? Enserio? Por eso nunca vivo o trabajo con mexicanos! Nunca!
Please. I'm saying we have to utilize any common ground necessary. People itt are acting exactly like they accuse the other side of behaving. It's not getting anyone anywhere good.
Yeah, I tried to vote in their best interests, if they also voted for their best interests this wouldn't be happening.
Well keep pointing and accusing the other. They're the only ones not willing to see the other side, or at least any of it.
I'm the guy they voted to ethnically cleanse, I'm not interested in playing patty-cake with them, if they want to act hard and vote to harm me, I'm gonna go ahead and hold them accountable for their own actions, I'm sorry you wanna hold their hand and weep gently for them, I won't.
I'm just wondering how many have experience with heavy equipment, farming, construction, transportation (beyond logistics), detonation. It's going to take everyone working together. That means making inroads, not enemies.
Why are you talking to me? Go tell the people depopulating the work force by the millions. Are you this blind, or are you just a neo nazi?
Something about flies, vinegar and honey.
Indeed, these farmers would get more sympathy is they weren't voting for the party of hate.
Wow. It's in your interest to make inroads. We've become too hyper-individualistic and divided. Social media plays no small part
If only the jews had been kinder to the Germans, made some inroads. It would've been in their interest! The Lügenpresse plays no small part.
Not all of these voters are Nazis (and some are). We let education skip away, we let unions erode. Yes, we, because we had families to feed and let transpacific and North American trade deals pass and watched football, American idol and played online rather than rioting and holding Democrat and Republican feet to fire. Just like how many/few are in the streets now.
You need to go talk to the problem, because your insanely and wildly blind and baby, it isn't very practical of you. Your really missing out on all the mild centrism you could be demanding out of the nazi side of the equation. Run along and find them.
Education slipped away because when Black people were allowed to go to the same schools as the white kids these guys pulled their kids out, stuck them in a private religious school that was allowed to discriminate and then demanded any tax dollars that would've gone to the public school get sent to the private school.
These farmers aren't big on labor organization! They hate it so much they use undocumented immigrants so they can deport them if they ever try to organize.
All of these guys sell food for export abroad, no american is eating what they're growing.
Because nothing is interrelated.
What can you do? Vote for people that want to help everyone while they vote, and win, on people that want to help only themselves.
Unfortunately, you gotta call it like it is. They are bad business owners making bad decisions. I can talk to them, try to convince them, but not control them.
Does everyone include everyone? Because I saw two major parties aligned with billionaires.
Will happily see them work for a factory farm if it means they end up voting for my rights next time, and not only their own interests.
You're the one eating the food and paying their prices. 🤷♀️
Your the one arguing for the nazis.