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McCain in Ethanol Country

By: Cindy Zimmerman5 Cindy Zimmerman5

 


McCain in Ethanol Country

Cindy Zimmerman
August 11, 2008
 
Republican presidential
candidate John McCain repeatedly called his audience at the Iowa State Fair on
Friday “my friends” but his stand on ethanol and farm policy are not very
friendly to farmers in this part of the country.

 
Give the man credit for
having the guts to stand up in the middle of the country’s largest ethanol
producing state, beside the Iowa commissioner of agriculture (and past corn
growers president) and the Iowa Farm Bureau president and tell them he disagreed
with them about ethanol support.

 
“I believe in renewable
fuels,” McCain said. “I don’t believe in ethanol subsidies, but I believe in
renewable fuels. I believe we have to do all of those things to restore our
economy.”

 
Some will say you can’t
have it both ways. McCain’s “Lexington Project” plan for energy independence
relies mainly on domestic oil exploration and natural gas. However, the plan
does include calling on car makers to made ” a more rapid and complete switch to
FFVs” as well as increasing development of cellulosic ethanol.

 
Very clearly, he would
like to eliminate all “mandates, subsidies, tariffs and price supports that
focus exclusively on corn-based ethanol and prevent the development of
market-based solutions which would provide us with better options for our fuel
needs.”

 
According to

this AP article
, McCain recently came out strongly against all farm
programs. “I don’t support agricultural subsidies no matter where they are,”
McCain said at a recent appearance in

Wisconsin.
“The farm bill, $300 billion, is something

America
simply can’t afford.”

 
Other Republicans are a
little concerned about McCain’s views.

 
“I would not advise him
to take that position,” Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) is quoted as saying in

the same article
. “For sure, he can’t lose Missouri and that’s in the upper
Midwest. Could he lose Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin and still be elected
president? Yes, but I wouldn’t advise him to have that strategy.”

 
It’s very important to
stress that farm policy is not just for Midwestern farmers. It is for all of
America. Of the $307 billion in spending authorized by the bill through 2012,
$209 billion is for nutrition programs and $25 billion is for conservation. Just
$35 billion - about 10 percent of the total - goes to agricultural commodity
programs, including research and market promotion, not just direct payments. I
would contend, as would many, that America can’t afford NOT to have farm policy
that helps farmers stay in business and feeds the hungry of this country and the
world.

 

Article Source: http://modirac.com

Cindy Zimmerman is author of this article on food shortage. Find more information about biofuels here.

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