Politics & Government
Arkansas U.S. Sen. John Boozman Sails To Victory For Third Term In U.S. Senate
The Associated Press declared him the winner over Democrat Natalie James and Libertarian Kenneth Cates shortly after the polls closed.
- November 8, 2022
Arkansas U.S. Sen. John Boozman won a third six-year term Tuesday, and if Republicans retake control, he is likely the next chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee.
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The Associated Press declared him the winner over Democrat Natalie James and Libertarian Kenneth Cates shortly after the polls closed at 7:30 p.m. An hour later, with 24% of votes counted, Boozman led with 131,664 votes to James’ 85,812 and Cates’ 22,063.
Even if Republicans do not take control of the Senate, Boozman will still play a key role in negotiating the farm bill next year. The legislation includes much more than farming, and it typically involves bipartisan horse-trading to advance.
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As chairman, the Arkansan would lead the work on writing the bill.
In August, he said his goal would be to get the legislation passed with more votes than the 2018 measure, which passed the Senate with 87 votes.
But Boozman said he expects the farm bill’s path through Congress will be challenging, regardless of which party controls the Senate. High fertilizer, fuel and labor costs will complicate the process, he said.
“We’re in a very unusual time, a unique time that we haven’t seen in decades with high inflation,” Boozman said. “So when we write this farm bill, it’s going to be very different than the atmosphere when we wrote the last one.”
Also complicating matters is the Biden administration’s inclusion of huge spending on climate-related programs. Last month, the senator sent Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack a letter asking to support its rationale for proposed spending on climate-family food production projects.
“We have a storied history of working together at the Agriculture Committee… unfortunately with this decision the majority has changed that dynamic…they have undermined one of the last successful bipartisan processes remaining in the Senate,” Boozman said in a floor speech in August.
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