WASHINGTON, IOWA (RFD NEWS) — The House has passed its version of the 2026 Farm Bill, but the political fight is far from over as the measure moves to the Senate. AgAmerica Lending says the next phase will be shaped by regional interests, ideological divisions, and competing priorities that could still alter major parts of the bill.
The House-passed package largely extends the current farm safety net through 2031 while updating credit access, conservation, nutrition, rural development, and research programs. That gives agriculture a working framework, but it does not settle the most divisive questions.
According to AgAmerica, the biggest pressure points now include SNAP funding, livestock regulations tied to California’s Proposition 12, and the fate of pesticide liability language that was stripped from the House version. Each of those issues carries enough political weight to complicate Senate negotiations.
The livestock section may be especially important for producers. AgAmerica says lawmakers are still weighing how far federal policy should go in limiting state-by-state production rules, while also considering the PRIME Act pilot to expand local processing options.
The bigger political story is that House passage only marks the beginning of final bargaining. The bill now enters a Senate process where major provisions could be softened, rewritten, or dropped before any final deal reaches the President.
The House’s version of the Farm Bill currently includes provisions aimed at providing relief for pork producers impacted by California’s Proposition 12.
Rob Brenneman, President of the National Pork Producers Council (NPPC), joined us on Thursday’s Market Day Report to discuss the legislation and what it could mean for the industry.
In his interview with RFD News, Brenneman outlined the proposed Prop 12 provision and why it is significant for both pork producers and consumers. He also discussed potential challenges for pork producers if Prop 12 relief is not included in the final version of the Farm Bill.
Brenneman highlighted that the House version included 100 percent of the organization’s policy requests and shared several key priorities. Finally, he shared his outlook on the legislative process as the bill moves into the Senate.