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Corn, cattle-country Democrats likely to be kicked out of House
If the current political forecast holds, Nov. 2 will deliver House Democrats their biggest pasting since 1994. With over 60 of their seats either leaning or already lost to GOP challengers, House Dems appear headed for the political weeds.

That could be especially so for Dems from corn and cattle country.
Several mid-October polls show 15 or so of the 28 Democratic members of the House Ag Committee in re-election races that are either called toss-up, leaning or lost to Republicans.

Many of the seats were thought to be safer than those in a Volvo. North and South Dakota’s single House members, Earl Pomeroy and Stephanie Herseth Sandlin, respectfully, usually bulletproof, are both now sinking.

Wisconsin’s only aggie, veteran Steve Kagen, looks to be going under, too. Iowa’s seven-term committee stalwart, Leonard Boswell, could be swept out by the GOP tide.

Meanwhile, Collin Peterson, the current committee chairman, is cruising to re-election and, quite likely, a new title: Ranking Member. A month ago he told DTN’s Jerry Hagstrom that the threat of demotion didn’t bother him one bit. In fact, he noted, moving to the minority “would make my life a lot simpler.”

Quite so, what with the 2012 Farm Bill the No. 1 priority of House and Senate aggies in the 112th Congress. Peterson rode herd over the lengthy, painfully slow process that rendered - as in cooking tallow - the current law. Little wonder he’d prefer to hunt pheasants this time around than committee compromises.

The political wave that is building to take out Committee Dems will, on its way in, deliver virtually every current Republican aggie back to Congress and, if the pundits are correct, raise Oklahoman Frank D. Lucas to chairman.

Lucas is not well known nationally but has steadily been climbing the GOP and ag ladders since entering the House through a special, 1994 election to fill the seat of long-time ag member (and Dem) Glenn English.

Lucas bio is short and almost purely political: 1982 ag econ graduate of Oklahoma State; 1984 and 1986 losses in Oklahoma statehouse races; 1988 statehouse win; 1994 election to Congress and re-election since. He’ll be 51 on Jan. 6, 2011, about the time he’ll likely assume the Ag Committee chairmanship.

Lucas lists his occupation as rancher and House disclosure forms show him owning 1,300 acres near his western Oklahoma hometown of Cheyenne.

And he’s got the debt to prove it. Between a mortgage on 500 acres, ranch operating loans and a note on some tractors, Lucas owes between $140,000 and $365,000 on the spread.
The documents also list him owning “17 assets totaling $885,011 to $1,925,000.”

A peek in the wallet that holds his campaign cash (www.opensecrets.org) shows Lucas an ag PAC favorite. From 1994 - when congressional races were far cheaper than today - through Sept. 30, Lucas banked $4 million in campaign money ($992,584 in the 2009/10 cycle alone). The bulk of it, however, $2.7 million, or $2 of every $3, came from political action committees.

This time around Lucas’s big billfold boys are some of ag’s biggest political greasers: Monsanto, $10,000; American Crystal Sugar, $10,000; USA Rice Federation, $10,000; Farm Credit Council, $10,000.
10/27/2010