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Dec 9, 2025
Trump Unveils $12 Billion Farm Bailout to Shield Farmers from Trade Fallout - Inquisitr News
The Inquisitr
President Donald Trump is rolling out $12 billion farm aid to rescue growers hit by trade war fallout.(@Maga_Trigger/X.com)
President Donald Trump unveiled a sweeping $12 billion emergency farm-aid package on Monday aimed at helping U.S. farmers recover from the sharp financial blows caused by the ongoing trade war and falling commodity prices. The move, announced during a White House roundtable with key agricultural leaders, marks one of the administration's biggest interventions in the farming sector this year.
According to Reuters, nearly all of the money, about $11 billion, will go to row-crop farmers, including soybean, corn, cotton, wheat, sorghum, and rice growers. The remaining $1 billion will support specialty crop producers, who have also been squeezed by rising input costs and weaker export demand.
Speaking from the Roosevelt Room, Trump framed the aid as a necessary shield for a sector he says has been hit unfairly by foreign retaliation. "Our farmers have been targeted and they've been hit hard," he said, arguing the package will provide stability at a time when global buyers, especially China, have scaled back on U.S. purchases.
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins outlined how the funds will work. She said the package is designed to help farmers cover the soaring cost of fertilizer and seeds while cushioning the drop in crop prices. Rollins told Reuters, "This assistance will ensure farmers can stay in business and keep feeding our country while the administration works to fix long-standing trade distortions."
According to reporting from NBC News, senior administration officials described the program as a temporary "bridge" to help growers stay afloat while negotiations continue with major trading partners. One official said the goal is to make sure "farmers aren't caught holding the bag for geopolitical fights they didn't start."
But many growers worry the aid may not be enough to fix the wider damage caused by the trade war. Several farmers in