Montana Cattle Committee ‘checkoff' bill tabled in Senate Agriculture committee
A herd of dairy cows (Photo courtesy of Farm Watch via Flickr CC-BY-SA 2.0).
A Montana beef marketing bill that caused waves in the agricultural community and would have created the Montana Cattle Committee was tabled in Senate committee on Tuesday.
House Bill 119, brought by House Speaker Brandon Ler, R-Savage, would have created a program to market Montana beef, called a checkoff. The United States Department of Agriculture's 'Got Milk' campaign is perhaps the most famous example of a 'checkoff' program.
The bill sought to create a 'favorable environment' for cattle producers in Montana to market their product both domestically and internationally.
Part of the debate was an additional tax on beef cattle, which opponents said would add up for producers, who didn't want to be paying to help market their competitors' products.
Proponents of the bill have said the program would have benefited cattle producers across the state.
There was a small amendment to the bill that would have required the governor to appoint members of the Cattle Committee.
One member of the Senate Agriculture committee, Sen. Dennis Lenz, R-Billings, said he was a supporter of the bill until the Senate hearing. He voted no both on the amendment and the bill itself.
'Ag leaders that I know (and) have worked with, were opposed to this,' Lenz said in the hearing. 'I feel like this bill needs a lot of work.'
The bill passed the House 52-47 before the Senate ag committee tabled it in a 7-4 vote. Sens. Bruce Gillespie, R-Ethridge; Wendy McKamey, R-Great Falls, Cora Neumann, D-Bozeman and Mike Yakawich, R-Billings voted against tabling the bill.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

30 minutes ago
Trump pushes for passage of spending bill
Republican Sen. Steve Daines from Montana joins ABC News to discuss Senate negotiations on President Donald Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill.'


Axios
32 minutes ago
- Axios
GOP rage with Musk spills out privately after break with Trump
House Republicans' longstanding frustrations with Elon Musk are spilling out in an unprecedented way behind closed doors after he criticized them for supporting President Trump's "One Big, Beautiful Bill." Why it matters: In some lawmakers' telling, the internal GOP frustration didn't come about overnight. It's been stewing for months — and Musk has now opened the floodgates. "He's a complete joke. He had no idea what the f*** he was doing, whatsoever," said one House Republican, speaking on the condition of anonymity to avoid retaliation from the billionaire Tesla owner. The lawmaker added: "Nobody really wanted him here. We couldn't wait to get rid of him." A second lawmaker pointedly noted electric vehicle manufacturers like Tesla benefit from tax credits the bill would eliminate: "Some of the things he's advocating for now serve his own purpose. So I guess he's now lobbying just like everybody else." State of play: Since Tuesday, Musk has been on a social media rampage against Republicans' marquee tax and spending cuts bill, arguing that it doesn't go nearly far enough in reducing the deficit. The recently departed Trump lieutenant wrote on his social media app, X, that the bill is an " disgusting abomination" and called to " fire all politicians who betrayed the American people." On Wednesday he took a step further — despite GOP efforts to talk him down — arguing that a "new spending bill should be drafted that doesn't massively grow the deficit." Spokespeople for Trump and the White House did not respond to requests for comment on this story. Between the lines: Musk has always had an uneasy relationship with Republican lawmakers, many of whom shuddered as he hacked and slashed spending in ways that negatively impacted their districts. But for the most part, they stayed mute and conciliatory for fear of antagonizing a man whose $420 billion net worth would be enough to foot the bill for the entire 2024 election more than 40 times over. Even now, many House Republicans expressed extreme reluctance to put their names to even mild criticism of the mercurial billionaire. What we're hearing: "He can say whatever he wants to. I don't care. I don't really pay attention," said the second House Republican. "He's not elected. He served at the pleasure of the president. He no longer does." A third called Musk's comments about the bill "ridiculous," venting, "He's never run for office. He's never been in elected office ... He's always been able to be a dictator." A fourth told Axios of Musk's call to oust those who supported the bill: "Many GOP members didn't boast Musk's support when he was in favor of the bill." "We are not deterred by his opposition now that he is against it," they added. The intrigue: House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) told House Republicans in a closed-door conference meeting on Wednesday that Trump himself is "pissed off" at Musk, according to a person familiar with the matter. Johnson said at a press conference after the meeting that he talks to Trump "multiple times a day" and that the president is "not delighted that Elon did a 180." The first House Republican backed up that assertion, telling Axios: "The president couldn't wait to get rid of him." "I knew it was a matter of time before the two alpha males would explode, fight each other," said a fifth House Republican. The other side: Musk still has a base of support in Congress, with many of House Republicans' more right-leaning fiscal hawks saying they are in accordance with his point of view.


New York Post
39 minutes ago
- New York Post
Albany just can't stop itself from messing with your kitchen
As New Yorkers worry about crime and sky-high living costs, Albany is moving to stop a different threat: supposedly poisonous pans. State Sen. Brad Hoylman-Sigal's bill to end the sale of nonstick cookware has cleared the Senate and is zooming to an Assembly vote — because the progressives who dominate the Legislature just love banning things, especially on trendy (though psuedoscientific) health grounds. Internet buzz about 'forever chemicals' in these pans has it that PFAS (polyfluoroalkyl substances) cause cancer, though the FDA has long maintained the pans are perfectly safe; the same coating is found in commonly-used electronics and even in pacemakers. Advertisement Of course, this follows Gov. Kathy Hochul's push to ban gas stoves — and any gas hookups for new homes. For all their talk of keeping government out of the bedroom, Democrats sure seem eager to mess with your kitchen.