MORGAN, MINN. – The only place that drew more ire than Washington, D.C,. on Tuesday at the opening day of Farmfest in southwestern Minnesota was California, but it was close.
During a debate Tuesday morning, congressional candidates in a broad swath of southern Minnesota railed against regulations — whether in far-away liberal states or the nation’s capital — impacting the profitability of family farms.
“California should not be saying anything about what our Midwest farmers can and can’t do,” said Joe Tierab, a GOP candidate in the swing Second District, discussing controversial California regulations that went into effect earlier this year mandating how hogs must be grown to be sold as pork in the Golden State.
During a discussion about water pollution rules blocked by the U.S. Supreme Court, Rep. Brad Finstad, a second-term Republican representing the southern First District, said, “It’s written by Washington bureaucrats who think they know how we farm.”
But it wasn’t just bureaucrats, but Congress, who drew blame on Tuesday, with the farm bill still stalled on the Hill.
While Finstad touted a version of the $1.5 trillion bill, undergirding programs for food stamps to crop insurance, passed earlier this year by the House agriculture committee, Rep. Angie Craig, a three-term Democrat representing southern suburbs through southeastern farm country, criticized the bill for cutting the nutrition title and adding to the national debt, saying it was unrealistic for the bill, as it’s currently written, to pass the full House, let alone the Democratic-controlled Senate.
“We’ve passed 25 post office names since the farm bill passed out of Ag [Committee],” Craig said. “If we had the votes on the House floor, they’d have it there.”

Tuesday’s first debate offered an inaugural opportunity for incumbents and challengers — including Rachel Bohman, a Rochester attorney running as a Democrat, and Teirab, a former assistant U.S. attorney — to be on the same stage.