There’s always plenty of speculation of who might fill the Cabinet as a new U.S. president takes office, followed by a lot of jockeying for those positions and usually a fight in the Senate to get some of those nominations confirmed.

Dennis ryan
Columnist
Ryan Dennis is the author of The Beasts They Turned Away, a novel set on a dairy farm. Visit his ...

There’s prestige and influence with being tapped as a secretary of a department, and ultimately these individuals help shape the outcomes of a presidency. Being in the news so frequently, these individuals often become recognizable household names.

Except, usually, the secretary of agriculture.

Since most citizens are not involved in farming (or at least don’t recognize the impact it has on their own lives), the role of secretary of agriculture doesn’t get much play in the media – and is usually a position that is not highly contested. Sometimes the office is even offered to individuals without any agricultural experience. In regard to inaugurations, it has been popular to select the secretary of agriculture as the “Designated Survivor,” meaning that this person must stay at another location during the address at the White House, in order to lead the country if an event occurs that wipes out the rest of the executive branch. Does that count as an honor?

I’ll admit, there aren’t too many secretaries of agriculture I can name. The only exception is Earl Butz, who served under Nixon and then Ford, and that’s only because he’s the most hated man to take the position. (He famously stated that it was all right to allow family farms to die because U.S. farming had to “go big or go home.” Jane Smiley named a fat pig after him in her novel Moo.) I also once read that Isaac Newton was the first U.S. commissioner of agriculture, the position that later became the secretary of agriculture. However, he’s not the Isaac Newton. Instead of being the father of mechanics, this Isaac Newton happened to be selling farm products to Abraham Lincoln when the position came up.

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Biden’s pick for secretary of agriculture, Tom Vilsack, is the first to be reappointed to the position after having left it after a presidential change. It is probably fair to label Vilsack’s first term as unremarkable. In fact, the most notable aspects of his tenure were failing to commit to Obama’s agenda of taking on corporate agriculture, as well as endorsing “pink slime,” the food additive used in American beef that made headlines in 2012.

Still, it got me curious of how other U.S. secretaries of agriculture used their position. What about the other appointees who held the position in the 21st century?

Ann Veneman (2001-05), the first of three secretaries of agriculture under George W. Bush, posted likely one of the most significant records in the position. The first and only female to hold the office, Veneman earned an ambitious legacy and is especially known for expanding international trade for the agricultural sector. She also increased funding for child nutrition and food programs, making them more available to families in need and reducing fraud, as well as created programs such as Leaders of Tomorrow that sought to support young people in agriculture. After initiating a scientific study, she released new dietary guidelines for Americans. The mad cow disease crisis occurred in her tenure, and she is thought to have acted swiftly to protect the American food supply.

There is little to say (and can be found) about the next Bush appointee, Mike Johanns, (2005-07). The entirety of his byline includes some criticism for the USDA being too slow to test cows suspected of mad cow disease and then his decision to resign from the post after two years to seek re-election in the Senate. His replacement, Ed Schafer (2008-09), had to deal with a scandal less than two days in office.

Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing Company, a major supplier to the National School Lunch Program, had allegations against them of animal cruelty and unsafe food practices. This led to the largest recall of meat in American history. As a result, Schafer spent his year as secretary of agriculture improving animal welfare and human food safety, including a comprehensive ban on slaughtering downer cattle and enforcing more regulations regarding the way cattle are handled in the slaughterhouse.

After Tom Vilsack served eight years in the Obama administration, Sonny Perdue (2017-21) took over the office under Trump. Perdue created a mentoring program for new farmers and sought to decrease regulations on farmers. During his term, Perdue ran into controversy for being accused by Lewis Ziska, a USDA plant physiology climate scientist, of suppressing scientific papers for political reasons. Politico also reported that under Perdue, 22 former campaign workers were hired by the USDA, even though they had no agricultural experience. During the pandemic, Perdue oversaw the Farmers to Families Food Box Program, which purchased agricultural goods from producers and redistributed them to communities.

Thus far, Vilsack’s second nomination has drawn slightly more criticism than has been usual for the role. Critics say he didn’t do enough to protect small farmers from Big Ag during his first tenure, nor addressed the discrimination against Black and other disadvantaged farmers.

Nonetheless, Vilsack has been given a rare opportunity to bring his experience back to the role and remake his legacy. Biden has given him an aggressive agenda meant to stimulate rural communities through conservation agriculture and renewable energy, creating a cleaner landscape for residents and wildlife. He has promised to take up the cause of regenerative agriculture, part of which may include companies who produce carbon to pay farmers to plant grasses and certain plants that remove more carbon from the atmosphere. He has also addressed the previous criticism of him and promises to impose antitrust laws on meatpackers and limit their control of the industry, as well as seek out “inherent barriers” that have hurt Black farmers.

Most of the Biden-Vilsack plans for agriculture have support from both high-ranking Republicans and Democrats. Now it’s up to Vilsack to see if he can ambitiously rewrite his legacy and become a secretary of agriculture people are going to remember.