Senate GOP Unveil Long-Awaited SNAP Proposals for Trump Bill
- Senate Republicans led by Agriculture Chair John Boozman proposed a modified SNAP cost-sharing plan within a major tax and spending bill in Washington in June 2025.
- This proposal responds to the House GOP’s plan to require states to pay 50% of SNAP administrative costs, aiming to reduce payment errors and state burdens amid internal party disagreements.
- Under the Senate plan, states with SNAP error rates at or below 5% would pay nothing, while those above 10% would pay up to 15%, contrasting with the House’s flatter 5% minimum cost-share.
- The USDA reported that the national error rate for SNAP in 2023 was 11.7%, with over twenty states exceeding a 10% error rate. Boozman noted that the Senate's proposal would save about $52 billion, which is $20 billion less in savings compared to the House's plan.
- Lawmakers aim to finalize the bill by July 4, but tensions over Medicaid cuts and SNAP reductions, which could affect millions, may complicate negotiations between House and Senate Republicans.
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47 Articles
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At a farm market in St. Petersburg, Florida, SNAP recipients were able to use their Electronic Benefits Transfer cards for food. (Photo by Lance Cheung/USDA).WASHINGTON — U.S. Senate Republicans will propose more moderate changes to the major federal food assistance program than their House counterparts, Senate Agriculture Chairman John Boozman said Wednesday, detailing a provision in a giant tax and spending cut bill that would penalize states …
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Anti-poverty campaigners and rights advocates have warned for months that the Republican Party's proposed cuts to federal nutrition assistance that tens of millions of Americans rely on would harm families as well as hundreds of thousands of jobs and the economies of cities and states across the nation—and on Wednesday one GOP senator appeared to have finally gotten the message. Sen. Jim Justice (R-W.Va.) toldPolitico that if the Senate approves…
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