ENDGAME: Congress is sticking around for another week as leaders try to clinch a last-minute agreement on government funding and coronavirus relief. Once again, they're facing a Friday deadline to pass either a final package or another short-term stopgap bill. What's new: The bipartisan working group of rank-and-file lawmakers behind a $908 billion pandemic response plan is aiming to introduce a two-part legislative package as soon as today. The two-pronged approach is meant to isolate the most controversial provisions, like money for local governments and liability protections for businesses. But it's unclear whether House and Senate leaders will go for that idea. FAST-FORWARD: While the current crop of lawmakers and White House officials wrap up their work, much of agricultural policy world's attention is already turning to 2021 — especially now that President-elect Joe Biden has formally announced Tom Vilsack as his pick for Agriculture secretary. The rollout: At an event in Delaware on Friday, Biden said Vilsack "wasn't anxious to come back" to the job that he held for eight years in the Obama administration, Pro Ag's Helena Bottemiller Evich and Liz Crampton report. "He wasn't looking for this job, but I was persistent," Biden said. "I asked him to serve again in this role because he knows USDA inside and out." Vilsack laid out his top priorities for the Agriculture Department next year: Pandemic relief for hungry families, rural communities, food workers and agriculture producers is at the top of the list. Next up is confronting climate change. Biden has said he wants U.S. agriculture to be the first to reach net-zero emissions, and he reiterated Friday that he supports paying farmers for climate-friendly practices like capturing carbon in their fields and forests. Notably, Vilsack also promised to "continue the important work of rooting out inequities and systemic racism in the systems we govern and the programs we lead." The former USDA chief has been criticized by Black farmers and civil rights advocates for not doing enough during his eight years as secretary to combat decades of discrimination within the department. Criticism from the left: While Biden's choice of Vilsack has been largely praised by farm organizations and commodity groups, the pick has also drawn plenty of blowback from environmental advocates and progressive groups within agriculture. (More on that from Grist.org and The Intercept.) Trade forecast: At the same event, Biden also introduced his nominee for U.S. trade representative, Katherine Tai. Our Pro Trade colleagues have more for Pros on Tai's public debut as the next top trade negotiator. HAPPY MONDAY, DEC. 14! Welcome to your Weekly Agriculture report, where we're breaking out the snow gear. Send tips to rmccrimmon@politico.com and @ryanmccrimmon, and follow us @Morning_Ag.
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