The 6,500-acre Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, a fixture of Prince George’s County for over a century, is the primary target of the administration’s latest restructuring. By shuttering the facility, Trump ends Maryland’s Federal Monopoly to exile ‘Deep State’ Scientists, moving over 2,500 D.C.-area positions to states like Missouri. The White House argues that moving research closer to “land-grant universities” and actual farmland will improve efficiency, but the political undertones are impossible to ignore.
The “Regional Alignment” Strategy
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) claims the relocation is about regional necessity rather than political retribution. Many of the displaced researchers from the Economic Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture will find their new offices in Kansas City. Secretary Rollins stated that the goal is to get research “outside of the beltway” to solve problems facing the future of American agriculture directly, where they occur. Rep. Glenn Ivey and other Maryland Democrats warn that this move disrupts “decades of research” that cannot be replicated elsewhere, characterizing the plan as a waste of taxpayer dollars.

Legal and Political Warfare
The announcement has immediately unified Maryland’s congressional delegation in a pledge to sue the administration. Lawmakers argue that the executive branch does not have the authority to unilaterally shutter and move these agencies without congressional approval. With 2026 being a “Map-Wars” midterm, the move is seen as a way to weaken Democratic strongholds in the D.C. suburbs while rewarding loyal regional hubs in the Midwest.
The ‘Deep State’ Narrative
Economic Fallout for Maryland
The closure of BARC is a massive blow to Prince George’s County’s local economy. Hundreds of specialized scientific roles are at stake, with many employees expected to resign rather than relocate. Decommissioning a 6,500-acre facility that has supported American farmers for over a hundred years marks a significant shift in the physical footprint of the federal government.
As Maryland prepares to challenge the relocation in court, the President remains focused on his broader goal of dismantling centralized federal power. Whether this is a move for “efficiency” or a tactical strike against perceived political enemies, the government operates. Is the relocation of federal scientists a necessary step to bring research closer to the farmers who need it, or is the decision to close BARC a calculated move by Trump to exile scientists he deems part of the ‘Deep State’?




