Congress is varied. The difference between the administration and Congress is that you have several interests. It's not one person changing their mind every five minutes; it's a committee like this with different sections of the country, different interests, coming to a conclusion. That's the improvement we're going to see.
The important point here is that Congress has power: article 1, section 8. This is a congressional purview and they've stepped up to really try to, I think, rein in this administration. They're deeply concerned about what they're seeing.
You look at the agricultural lobby and how they responded when Mexico said that they're going to move corn exports from the U.S. to Canada and Brazil. The farm lobby jumped up. You might have seen the piece I wrote saying that Secretary Ross showed up with a couple of talking points, and Secretary of Agriculture Perdue showed up with an armload of charts, diagrams, electoral maps, and farm data. These interests will become more vocal. We already heard Senator Heitkamp of North Dakota talk about grain grading as an issue the administration will have to address.
For good and for bad we're going to see these interests enter the fore.