Project 2025 Status
Chapter Author (with noted assistance from Rachael Wilfong)
Deputy Director, Center for Energy and Environment, Senior Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) and former Senior Research Fellow at The Heritage Foundation
Bakst’s vision echoes longstanding conservative calls to remove government oversight of food and agricultural safety and farming husbandry practices, arguing they hamper business for farmers and ranchers. This includes the call for less environmental stewardship and rules related to sustainability that cut into profits for big agricultural producers. These cuts, coupled with calls to remove food safety labeling, and decrease USDA oversight, would weaken current federal protections for food consumers of American agricultural and animal products. While some reforms might reduce costs of doing business for small farmers, the proposals reflect the goals of big agribusiness producers and desire to lower costs to compete with global competitors.
The call to limit federal welfare food programs, and require SNAP recipients to work, is also a familiar conservative argument that too many people getting federal assistance are taking advantage of the system, choosing to live below the poverty level rather than work. If enacted, the reforms would likely increase hunger in America, and push more of the poorest Americans into greater food insecurity, impacting young children and mothers with limited incomes.
Bakst calls for removing government hurdles to food production for the agricultural industry by reshaping the USDA and reversing Biden policies that conservatives say place climate and environmental concerns over the need to “efficiently produce safe food.” Removing safety and regulatory controls on large-scale farming and producers of agricultural products is central to this goal. Other proposals seek to remove “unjustified” foreign trade barriers blocking market access for American agricultural goods. “Reforms should be based on “sound science, personal freedom, private property, the rule of law, and service to all Americans.”
Here, conservatives argue against the ‘science’ of climate change and industrial threats that underlie Biden policies including “climate smart” policies designed to support food and environmental safety and agricultural sustainability.
Proposals include: