- Tate Bennett, Chief of Staff to USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins, personally called executives at Walmart, Kroger, and Albertsons in the days before July 4 to ask about their beef pricing — a direct, coordinated government contact with the nation’s largest grocery chains that represents an unusually hands-on form of pricing pressure from a Republican administration that has otherwise championed deregulation and free markets.
- The calls targeted the July 4 holiday weekend deliberately, when burger and grilling demand peaks and consumers are most sensitive to beef sticker shock at checkout — the White House has been acutely aware that food inflation, particularly meat prices, is one of the most politically visible components of the consumer price experience, and one that resonates directly with the working-class voters who form the core of Trump’s coalition.
- Beef prices have been elevated in 2025-2026 due to a structural supply constraint: the US cattle herd is near its smallest size in decades following years of drought that forced ranchers to cull herds, meaning tighter supply relative to demand is the fundamental driver — a dynamic that government phone calls to grocery chains cannot fix, since retailers are passing through elevated wholesale costs rather than extracting outsized margin at the consumer level.
- The White House’s willingness to make direct calls to retail chains about pricing decisions reflects a broader Trump administration pattern of using regulatory and political leverage to influence private business outcomes on consumer-facing issues, following similar pressure campaigns on oil companies, shipping companies, and pharmaceutical firms — with mixed results, since structural supply-demand imbalances don’t yield to phone calls from Cabinet chiefs of staff.
What Happened?
USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins’ Chief of Staff Tate Bennett called executives at Walmart, Kroger, Albertsons, and other major US grocery chains in the days before the July 4 holiday to discuss their beef prices. The calls were described as inquiries about what grocery chains were charging for beef heading into the peak grilling weekend — but the context of a senior USDA official calling the country’s dominant retailers with pointed questions about pricing is understood in the industry as political pressure, not casual market research. July 4 is the single biggest weekend of the year for beef demand, making it the highest-visibility moment for meat prices in the American consumer psyche.
Why It Matters?
This story sits at the intersection of food inflation politics and the limits of executive leverage over private markets. The Trump administration has made lowering food prices a political priority, both as a response to the inflation legacy of the Biden years and as a way to demonstrate tangible results for working-class voters. But the structural driver of elevated beef prices — a historically small US cattle herd that will take years to rebuild — is not something that phone calls to Walmart can address. Grocery chains are generally operating on thin margins (2-3% net for large supermarkets) and are passing through elevated wholesale beef costs, not extracting unusual consumer rent. The political optics of senior administration officials calling private retailers about pricing decisions will also concern free-market conservatives, even as the White House frames it as consumer protection.
What’s Next?
Watch whether the administration escalates from phone calls to more formal intervention — including potential USDA investigations into beef pricing practices, referrals to the DOJ Antitrust Division, or executive orders targeting meat packer margins. The meatpacking industry, which is highly concentrated (four firms process roughly 80% of US beef), has been a prior target of Biden-era pricing investigations that found limited evidence of price-gouging above and beyond supply-driven cost increases. Any move to investigate or regulate meat prices would face the same evidentiary challenge. The more impactful policy lever for beef prices — incentivizing cattle herd rebuilding through favorable grazing and loan programs — is slower and less politically visible, but addresses the actual supply constraint that is driving prices.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













