News · Press Release

Miller-Meeks and Nunn Silent As Trump Screws Iowa Soybean Farmers While Bailing Out Argentina

Iowa Farmers Union: “Our farmers are angry”

Donald Trump, Mariannette Miller-Meeks, and Zach Nunn’s reckless tariffs are worsening the crisis facing Iowa soybean farmers – devastating soybeans sales, farmers’ profits, and markets available to American farmers. 

Instead, Argentina has flooded the soybean market as tariffs cause Chinese purchases of American soybeans to dry up. And now, Trump is sending a $20 billion bailout to Argentina while Iowa farmers suffer. 

Mariannette Miller-Meeks and Zach Nunn have backed these tariffs at every turn, repeatedly voting to protect them, and must answer why they refuse to join Senator Grassley and stand up for Iowa farmers.

DCCC Spokesperson Katie Smith:
“Mariannette Miller-Meeks and Zach Nunn promised to lower costs for Iowans, but instead, they’re putting Argentina before Iowa. Their agenda is devastating Iowa soybean farmers, raising costs, and causing chaos for Iowa’s economy.” 

Read more:

KCCI: Iowa farmers sound alarm as Trump administration backs $20 billion Argentina bailout

  • Iowa farmers are voicing frustration and concern after President Donald Trump hosted Argentine President Javier Milei at the White House this week — just days after announcing a $20 billion U.S. bailout for Argentina aimed at stabilizing its financial markets.
  • The bailout, structured as a currency swap through Argentina’s central bank, comes as a trade dispute is costing U.S. soybean producers sales to the South American nation — raising concern that the administration’s focus on foreign financial aid is coming at the expense of American farmers.
  • “Our farmers are angry,” said Polk County farmer and president of the Iowa Farmers Union Aaron Lehman. “We’re facing a financial crisis because we’ve been avoiding common-sense trade policies and instead have started trade wars with many countries around the world.”
  • Lehman said the bailout will directly benefit Argentina’s agricultural industry — one that competes with U.S. farmers for access to the Chinese market.
  • “Now the U.S. Treasury is helping Argentina with a $20 billion bailout that is directly helping Argentine farmers sell their soybeans to China, undercutting the Chinese market for U.S. soybeans,” he said.
  • But Iowa agriculture leaders say the decision couldn’t come at a worse time.
  • China, once the top buyer of American soybeans, stopped purchasing U.S. crops in May in response to Trump’s ongoing trade dispute. Since then, China has ramped up imports from South America — particularly from Argentina, which recently cut export taxes to make its soybeans more competitive.
  • Chad Hart, an agricultural economist at Iowa State University, said the ripple effects are already visible.
  • “When you add all this together, it leads to falling soybean prices, which means lower farm incomes,” Hart said. “At the same time, they’re facing some of the highest costs they’ve ever seen.”
  • Lehman added that farmers are also still waiting for a promised domestic aid package — one that’s been delayed amid the ongoing government shutdown.
  • “In the meantime, a promised aid package to U.S. farmers sits on the government’s back shelf,” he said. “This is putting U.S. farmers at risk. How can the current administration justify a bailout for Argentina, continue a trade war with China, and then fail to deliver a promised aid package to U.S. farmers?”
  • Hart said the strain extends beyond individual farms.
  • “Agriculture is dragging the general economy down in Iowa,” he said, pointing to layoffs at John Deere and a rise in farm bankruptcies.
  • Lehman said the state’s leaders need to step in.
  • “Our Iowa congressional delegation should be demanding answers,” he said.

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