H.R. 7567 · 119th Congress
Farm Bill 2.0

News · July 8, 2026

Senate Ag Committee Releases Farm Bill 2.0 Draft With 100+ Bills

Senate Agriculture Chairman Boozman released the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft on July 7, 2026, folding in more than 100 bipartisan Senate bills across all titles.

#senate-draft#farm-bill-2-0#boozman#bipartisan-measures

TL;DR: Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman John Boozman released details of the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft on July 7, 2026, folding in more than 100 bipartisan Senate bills across all titles. The committee framed the package as "built for farmers" and signaled broad Senate backing plus openness to continued negotiation.

Key takeaway

The Senate's Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft incorporates more than 100 bipartisan Senate bills across every title, released title by title on July 7, 2026.

What happened

Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman John Boozman released details of the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft on July 7, 2026. The draft folds in more than 100 bipartisan Senate bills across the full scope of the legislation.

Boozman organized the announcement title by title, walking through how the incorporated measures map onto each part of the bill. A "discussion draft" is a preliminary text released to gather feedback before a formal markup, not final legislative language.

The committee characterized the package as "built for farmers," signaling a producer-focused legislative priority. The framing emphasized broad Senate backing and openness to continued negotiation, which suggests the text is a starting point rather than a fixed offer.

This Senate draft runs alongside the House vehicle, H.R. 7567, the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026. You can compare the two tracks on our Senate status page and follow the wider timeline and status.

What it means

The headline number here is the count of measures, not a dollar figure or a vote tally. More than 100 bipartisan Senate bills folded into one draft indicates the committee is trying to build a wide coalition before it moves to markup.

For the audiences this bill affects, the immediate takeaway is that many stand-alone priorities may now travel inside a single package:

  • Row-crop and specialty farmers: individual commodity and specialty-crop bills that stalled on their own could advance as part of the larger draft.
  • Ranchers: livestock and animal-health measures introduced separately this Congress may be reflected in the draft's relevant titles.
  • Conservation and crop-insurance stakeholders: program-specific bills folded in could shape how those titles are written.
  • SNAP recipients and advocates: nutrition-title provisions will depend on which bipartisan measures were incorporated, details to be confirmed as the full text is reviewed.

Because this is a discussion draft, nothing here is enacted. The specific section numbers, funding levels, and program changes still need line-by-line review. Track those details on our funding breakdown and full bill summary as the text is analyzed.

What's next

As of July 8, 2026, the next step is public and stakeholder feedback on the discussion draft, followed by a committee markup where amendments are offered and voted on. A discussion draft typically precedes markup by days or weeks, though no markup date is confirmed here.

Because the committee emphasized openness to continued negotiation, the incorporated measures are likely to shift before any committee vote. Expect commodity groups, conservation organizations, and nutrition advocates to weigh in on which of the 100-plus bills made the cut and which did not.

Reconciling the Senate draft with the House text in H.R. 7567 remains the larger hurdle. Follow markup activity on our vote tracker and see how the draft stacks up against prior law on what's new vs. 2018.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft?

The Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft is a preliminary Senate text released by Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman John Boozman on July 7, 2026. It incorporates more than 100 bipartisan Senate bills across all titles of the legislation. A discussion draft is released to gather feedback before a formal markup and is not final or enacted law.

How many bills are folded into the Senate Farm Bill 2.0 draft?

More than 100 bipartisan Senate bills are folded into the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft, according to the Senate Agriculture Committee. Chairman Boozman organized the July 7, 2026 announcement title by title, covering the full scope of the bill. The exact list of measures and their section placements will become clearer as the full text is reviewed.

When was the Senate Farm Bill 2.0 draft released?

The Senate Agriculture Committee released details of the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft on July 7, 2026. Chairman John Boozman presented the package title by title and emphasized broad Senate backing along with openness to continued negotiation. No committee markup date was announced in the release.

Is the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft now law?

No. The Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft is not law. It is a preliminary Senate text meant to gather feedback before a formal committee markup, where members offer and vote on amendments. The draft would still need to pass committee, clear the full Senate, be reconciled with the House bill H.R. 7567, and be signed by the President.

Who is Chairman Boozman and what did he say?

John Boozman is the Chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee. On July 7, 2026, he released details of the Farm Bill 2.0 discussion draft, describing it title by title and characterizing the package as "built for farmers." He emphasized that the draft has broad Senate backing and that the committee remains open to continued negotiation.

How does the Senate draft relate to H.R. 7567?

The Senate discussion draft runs alongside H.R. 7567, the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, which is the House vehicle for the Farm Bill 2.0 reauthorization. The two chambers must eventually reconcile their texts into a single bill. As of July 8, 2026, the Senate draft is preliminary and subject to change before any markup or floor vote.

Sources

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