Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Articles by Khaleda Rahman

2 articles found

Cattle Farmers Make Urgent Plea as Trump's Argentina Beef Deal Looms
Technology

Cattle Farmers Make Urgent Plea as Trump's Argentina Beef Deal Looms

Cattle farmers have urged lawmakers to support legislation aimed at reducing the risk of wildfires. On Tuesday, the Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry Committee voted 19-5 to advance the Fix Our Forests Act, which would overhaul forest management and reduce legal and environmental checks on forest-thinning projects. The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) has urged lawmakers to pass the legislation to better mitigate the “widespread risk of catastrophic wildfire.” Newsweek has contacted the White House for comment via email. Dairy cows stand in the corral of a dairy farm west of Bakersfield, California, on April 9. (Photo by FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images) Why It Matters While farmers have traditionally been among the president’s biggest supporters, members of the struggling industry have increasingly expressed frustration with the Trump administration over its trade and immigration policies. This week, cattle farmers have criticized Trump’s plan to import beef from Argentina as a way to reduce high prices for meat in the U.S. What To Know According to the bill’s text, the legislation would direct the agriculture secretary to “develop a strategy to increase opportunities to utilize livestock grazing as a wildfire risk reduction strategy.” Kaitlynn Glover, the NCBA’s executive director of natural resources and executive director of the Public Lands Council (PLC), said the federal government “must better utilize grazing to combat the wildfire crisis.” Glover said the legislation would “help to unleash the conservation prowess of ranchers by limiting frivolous litigation and streamlining government processes to reduce fuel loads on the landscape at a much faster pace.” This bipartisan group of senators introduced the legislation in April: John Curtis, a Utah Republican; John Hickenlooper, a Colorado Democrat; Tim Sheehy, a Montana Republican; and Alex Padilla, a California Democrat. In a news release at the time, the lawmakers said it would “combat catastrophic wildfire risk, improve forest management, and secure a stronger economy, safer communities, and healthier, more resilient forests.” Some environmental groups and opponents argue that the bill advances the logging industry’s priorities, limits public engagement and does little to reduce the risk of wildfires. While cattle farmers hope lawmakers will pass the legislation and President Donald Trump will sign it into law before the 2026 wildfire season, they have expressed skepticism over another recent proposal coming out of Washington. The NCBA was among the organizations that criticized Trump’s plan to import beef from Argentina, with CEO Colin Woodall saying it “only creates chaos at a critical time of the year for American cattle producers, while doing nothing to lower grocery store prices.” John Boyd, a cattle and crop farmer and the founder of the National Black Farmers Association, previously told Newsweek that he was “appalled President Trump, who campaigned on how he loved farmers, is putting America’s farmers out of business by helping Argentina farmers first.” Meanwhile, Senator Deb Fischer, a Nebraska Republican, has urged Trump to reconsider the plan, saying ranchers “cannot afford to have the rug pulled out from under them when they’re just getting ahead or simply breaking even.” Beef prices have soared to record highs as diminished cattle herds fail to match high American demand, and imports are down because of tariffs Trump imposed on exporting nations, including a 50 percent tariff on Brazil. What People Are Saying Kaitlynn Glover, NCBA executive director of natural resources and PLC executive director, said in a statement: “The established science is clear: grazing can reduce wildfire risk by up to 80 percent. Given the widespread risk of catastrophic wildfire, the federal government must better utilize grazing to combat the wildfire crisis. The Fix Our Forests Act will help to unleash the conservation prowess of ranchers by limiting frivolous litigation and streamlining government processes to reduce fuel loads on the landscape at a much faster pace. “By expediting environmental reviews and cutting government red tape that delays critical projects, this bill will increase the resiliency of our treasured national forest system at no cost to taxpayers. NCBA and PLC thank Chairman John Boozman and Ranking Member Amy Klobuchar for working to get this bill out of committee and look forward to a full floor vote.” Senator Alex Padilla said in a statement: “The status quo around wildfires isn’t working and far too many Americans have paid the price. The families I’ve met who have lost everything to the devastation in Los Angeles and in wildfire disasters across the country deserve action. That’s why we’re coming together to confront this crisis and rethink how we prevent and respond. Today’s advancement of our bipartisan bill i...

Trump Could Make Major Change to US Education
Technology

Trump Could Make Major Change to US Education

The U.S. Department of Education is exploring ways to move some education programs to another federal agency, a spokesperson confirmed to Newsweek. It comes after a new round of layoffs at the department this month eliminated almost every employee working in the department’s Office of Special Education Programs, amid the ongoing federal government shutdown. Why It Matters The effort is part of President Donald Trump’s broader plan to shut down the Education Department and parcel its operations to other agencies. But an act of Congress would be required to close the department and move its functions to other agencies. But over the summer, the department started handing off its adult education and workforce programs to the Labor Department. It also emerged over the summer that the department was negotiating a deal to transfer its $1.6-trillion student-loan portfolio to the Treasury Department. The headquarters of the Department of Education on March 12, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images) What to Know Madi Biedermann, the department’s deputy assistant secretary for communications, said in an email to Newsweek that the department is “exploring additional partnerships with federal agencies to support some education programs without any interruption or impact on students with disabilities.” She said that no agreement has been signed. Biedermann did not reveal which agencies it was looking to partner with, but both Trump and Education Secretary Linda McMahon have spoken about moving some education, including the $15-billion Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) program, to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Newsweek has contacted HHS via email for comment. What People Are Saying Department of Education spokesperson Madi Biedermann said in a statement to Newsweek: “Secretary McMahon has been very clear that her goal is to put herself out of a job by shutting down the Department of Education and returning education to the states. “The department is exploring additional partnerships with federal agencies to support some education programs without any interruption or impact on students with disabilities, but no agreement has been signed. Secretary McMahon is fully committed to protecting the federal funding streams that support our nation’s students with disabilities.” Speaking about the IDEA program, Education Secretary Linda McMahon said during her Senate confirmation hearing: “I’m not sure that it’s not better served in HHS, but I don’t know.” She added: “It is of high priority to make sure that the students who are receiving disability funding that is not impacted. It is incredibly important that those programs continue to be funded.” HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrote on X in March that HHS “ is fully prepared to take on the responsibility of supporting individuals with special needs and overseeing nutrition programs that were run by @usedgov. We are committed to ensuring every American has access to the resources they need to thrive. We will make the care of our most vulnerable citizens our highest national priority.” What’s Next A federal judge last week temporarily blocked the Trump administration from proceeding with the mass layoffs while a legal challenge plays out.