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P.M. BRIEFING : Cut in Sugar Support Rejected

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<i> From Times Wire Services </i>

The Senate voted today to keep the sugar support price at 18 cents a pound, rejecting a proposed 2-cent cut with arguments it was a softheaded idea that would hurt U.S. farmers and workers.

Sen. Bill Bradley (D-N.J.) vainly argued that the sugar program, which guarantees farmers a minimum price for sugar and sharply limits imports of lower-priced foreign sugar, was “the S&L; of the farm program.”

The 54-44 vote to kill Bradley’s amendment marked the second time the Senate Agriculture Committee has prevailed in a showdown on the new farm policy bill. Senators refused last week to cut off crop subsidies to large farmers. There are no restrictions at present.

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The Bush Administration had supported the cut in the sugar support price, which it said would be equal to the cuts that other commodities face under the 1985 farm law.

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