President Donald Trump is expected to announce a $12 billion farm aid package at a roundtable on Monday, a White House official told CNN.
Most of the aid — $11 billion — will be directed toward crop farmers through one-time payments under the Farmer Bridge Assistance program, according to the official. The rest will go to farmers whose crops fall outside the umbrella of the assistance program.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins will attend the roundtable with Trump, which is scheduled for 2 p.m. ET at the White House. Corn, cotton, sorghum, soybean, rice, cattle, wheat and potato farmers will also attend.
The farm aid announcement details were first reported by Bloomberg, but Rollins hinted at the bridge payments at a Cabinet meeting last week.
Rollins suggested that it was not the impact of the administration’s tariffs — but Biden administration policies — that have caused farmers to need assistance. She credited Trump for opening the markets through trade deals without directly acknowledging how tariffs have impacted farmers.
“What you’ve been able to do is open those markets up and again, move toward an era where our farmers are not so reliant on government checks, but have the markets to sell their product. Having said that, we do have a bridge payment we’ll be announcing with you next week, as we’re still trying to recover from the Biden years,” Rollins said.
“For so long, our farmers, many of them, have been farming for government checks instead of moving their product around the world. These trade deals change that forever, and it isn’t one trade deal or two trade deals, it’s dozens of trade deals,” Rollins said.
In late September, Rollins said the farm economy, and especially row croppers, was facing “a significant challenge right now,” calling the impact of Trump’s tariffs a “time of uncertainty.”


