The distinction between farming and fishing in federal policy was so obvious for the majority of the previous century that it was hardly necessary to explain it. Farmers cultivated crops on land. On the water, fishermen labored. The Commerce Department and NOAA were for one, and the USDA was for the other. Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina is the sponsor of two amendments to the 2026 Farm Bill that would start redrawing that jurisdictional line. These amendments would be discreetly added by voice vote to one of the biggest agricultural bills that Congress has produced in a long time.
The Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026, H.R. 7567, passed the House on April 30 following a floor procedure that included over a hundred amendments covering anything from SNAP job requirements to food assistance programs. The debate did not revolve around the fish provisions. They were approved without a recorded vote, which is occasionally how important policy changes actually proceed—not through heated floor debates, but rather by wording that finds its moment when no one is looking for a fight.
The USDA Office of Seafood, which had been formed but lacked statutory foundation, is made permanent by the first clause. In federal bureaucracy, that is a significant distinction. An administration may decide to reorganize, disband, or dissolve an office that does not have a legislative home. Removing an office that is legally codified requires a separate act of Congress. Permanence is important to the seafood business, which has long argued that domestic fishermen should have the same institutional support as row crop growers.
The second clause modifies the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act by specifically adding commercial fishing and fish processing companies to the list of firms that qualify for USDA operating and ownership loans.
That’s the kind of subtle legislative reform that doesn’t make headlines but changes what’s feasible for a fish processor in Maine or a small boat operator in Louisiana who didn’t previously have access to the capital programs that land farmers take for granted. Agricultural operations would no longer be a prerequisite for access to equipment loans, finance for vessel acquisition, and assistance with permit purchases through USDA channels.
Although it functions differently, there is a third seafood-adjacent provision that is worth mentioning. A different amendment would forbid school food authorities from buying processed or raw fish from Vietnam and India.
The school meal provision adds another layer of market restriction on Vietnamese products, this time focusing on institutional procurement rather than commercial import, given that Vietnam was concurrently navigating the U.S. MMPA import ban on sectors of its fisheries sector. It’s still uncertain if this change will make it through the Senate negotiations unaltered or if it will be viewed as the kind of trade-sensitive clause that causes diplomatic resistance.
Here, the larger context is important. Commercial fisherman in the United States have long said that they are subject to more stringent environmental and safety laws than their international rivals, whose goods are sold at lower rates in the United States, and that they do not have access to the federal finance and support systems that domestic farmers receive.

In particular, the USDA loan structure is an example of the infrastructure that has enabled generations of family farmers to grow and weather difficult times. The claim that fishing enterprises should have equal access is straightforward; the only thing lacking has been the political will to implement the structural adjustment.
