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Behind-the-scenes Texas ‘ag girl’ gets prime time role in leading 100,000-employee USDA with a trillion dollar budget on tap.
President-elect Donald Trump on Nov. 23 nominated conservative Texas attorney Brooke Rollins to be his administration’s secretary of agriculture.
Co-Founder of Trump Advisory Group
Rollins co-founded America First Policy Institute (AFPI) with Trump National Economic Council chair Larry Kudlow in 2021. Former Trump Small Business Administration chief and America First Action PAC chair Linda McMahon signed as AFPI board chair, as did eight former Trump cabinet secretaries.
Although not directly affiliated with the former president or his 2024 reelection campaign, Rollins and the AFPI have significant influence on shaping Trump’s policy development and will continue to be prominent voices in his second administration.
Its platform espouses “job creation and low unemployment, expansion of affordable housing, reducing federal bureaucracy, cracking down on crime, passing congressional term limits, and ending foreign war and reliance on China.”
Trump is, indeed, tapping the AFPI for administration posts. Others from the institute nominated for key roles are McMahon as secretary of Education, AFPI security center chief and former Trump national security adviser John Ratcliffe as CIA director, and AFPI legal center chair Pam Bondi as attorney general.
Served in Trump’s White House
Rollins, among speakers at July’s Republican National Convention, is widely regarded as a low-key but influential Republican operative praised for her managerial competence and loyalty to the former president.
A member of the 2016 Trump campaign’s Economic Policy Council, Rollins joined Trump’s White House in 2018 as an assistant to the president and then as director of the Office of American Innovation, where she worked on initiatives with Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, before becoming acting director of the Trump’s Domestic Policy Council in 2020.
She was among the leading candidates to serve as Trump’s chief of Staff. Susie Wiles was eventually chosen for the position.
“Brooke was on my 2016 Economic Advisory Council, and did an incredible job during my First Term as the Director of the Domestic Policy Council, Director of the Office of American Innovation, and Assistant to the President for Strategic Initiatives,” he wrote on Truth Social.
Longtime Lone Star Operator
After graduating from Texas A&M with a Bachelor of Science in agricultural development in 1994, Rollins earned a law degree from the University of Texas and clerked for a Northern District of Texas federal justice before working as a litigation attorney in Dallas.
During her 15 years at the TPP, Rollins grew the policy shop from six staffers based in San Antonio to nearly 100 employees in a new Austin headquarters two blocks from the Texas State Capitol with an eight-figure budget funded by donations from the Koch brothers, ExxonMobil, and dozens of corporations, interest groups, conservative organizations, and wealthy GOP donors.
Personal Life
Rollins exposes little of her personal life to media scrutiny. An October 2022 profile in Maroon, a magazine for Texas A&M alumni, repeats what her biography succinctly states.
Rollins “and her husband, Mark ’94, currently reside in Fort Worth, Texas, and spend a majority of their free time taxiing their four children to baseball games, cattle shows, piano lessons, and Aggie football games.”
In announcing Rollins as his secretary of Agriculture, Trump cited her “upbringing in the small and agriculture-centered town of Glen Rose, Texas, to her years of leadership involvement with Future Farmers of America and 4H, to her generational family farming background, to guiding her four kids in their show cattle careers.”
In interviews over the years, Rollins has framed herself as an “ag girl” from a farm town more than a member of a farm family.
At Texas A&M University, she was elected as the first woman to serve as associated student government president in the then 115-year-old school’s history.
“The biggest lesson I learned as student body president was to always find a way to serve others,” Rollins told Maroon nearly three decades later. “Think big about how you can do that, but always stay rooted in your values. The method of how we serve others changes frequently, but why we serve should remain steadfast.”
What’s Ahead
The biggest issue facing the new secretary of Agriculture is getting the five-year Farm Bill adopted. A massive omnibus that sets agriculture, conservation, and nutrition policies, the current five-year Farm Bill that Trump signed in 2018 was extended a year in November 2023. That extension will soon expire.
Farms bills authorize only mandatory funding based on multiyear estimates as baselines for annual allocations. Discretionary spending, about $25 billion a year, is not included in farm bills, which over the entire span allocate up to $1 trillion.
Kennedy has espoused support for yet vague wholesale revisions to the HHS and the dietary guide. He has pledged to remove ultra-processed foods from school lunches and to prohibit soda, candy, or other “junk foods” from being eligible for purchase using food stamps under the USDA’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.