Farmer Who Voted for Trump BEGS Him to End Trade War as He ‘Feels the Pain’

by TheSarkariForm

In a twist that could rival any political drama, a soybean farmer who once proudly cast his vote for Donald Trump in the 2016, 2020, and 2024 elections is now pleading for an end to the trade war that’s wreaking havoc on his livelihood. The farmer, who had high hopes for Trump’s promises to revitalize American agriculture, finds himself grappling with the unintended consequences of those very policies.

The crux of the issue lies in the escalating tariffs between the U.S. and China. Trump’s administration imposed steep tariffs on Chinese goods, prompting China to retaliate with its own tariffs on American products, including soybeans. This tit-for-tat has severely disrupted the soybean market, leaving farmers like our protagonist with dwindling exports and plummeting prices.

As Trump and China continue upping their tariffs, Caleb Ragland, a Kentucky soybean farmer who serves as the president of the American Soybean Association, pleaded with Trump to end the trade war in an article published on Wednesday in The Free Press.

“I am one of the 500,000 soybean farmers in America who feels the pain. I rely on my own farm for 100 percent of the income for my family and the families of our three full-time workers,” he wrote.

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He described the trade war as a “gamble with American livelihoods, especially for farmers” and urged Trump to “please make a deal with China now” to end it.

China imported 22.12 million metric tons of soybeans from the U.S. during the 2024-25 season, Reuters reported, and it’s the top U.S. product imported into China.

Trump’s announcement that retaliatory tariffs on countries willing to negotiate is a “sign of the president’s good faith,” Ragland wrote, noting that a deal is urgent because the farm economy is “weaker now than it was in his first term” following the first trade war against China, as well as rising inflation and production costs.

“The longer the stalemate continues, the likelier China is to take its business elsewhere—like Brazil, for instance, which could bring an additional 70 million acres of land into agricultural production by cutting down rainforests and converting degraded pastureland,” he warned.

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1 comment

GoatLorde April 21, 2025 - 8:07 am

We tried to tell you!!!!

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