Sunday, 01 June 2025

House Republicans Have A New Plan To Save $300 Billion, Here’s How


The Republican led House Agricultural Committee is introducing a new proposal that would save the Federal government $300 billion.

The new proposal aims to cut nearly $300 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as SNAP.

The 97-page proposal calls for states to cover a portion of SNAPand tighten the eligibility requirements, ensuring the progr benefits costs am is not abused.

Also included in the proposal is a new change in “work requirements, waivers, and other criteria for SNAP recipients who are able-bodied adults without dependents, which will save $92 billion.”

Per The Hill:

House Republicans rolled out legislation Monday evening that would make significant changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), as the party seeks deep cuts to federal spending as part of a broader plan to advance President Trump’s legislative agenda.

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The 97-page text from the House Agriculture Committee includes provisions that would require states to cover a portion of SNAP benefit costs, tighten eligibility requirements for the program and seek to block the federal government from being able to increase monthly benefits in the future.

The panel is set to hold a meeting on the legislation later Tuesday afternoon, with hopes to advance the text out of committee.

The proposal comes as Republicans are assembling a sprawling package across multiple committees to enact Trump’s tax priorities, boost funding for defense and his deportation plans, and significantly cut federal spending.
For their role in the party’s overall goal to find more than a trillion dollars in savings, Republicans on the House Agriculture Committee were tasked with crafting recommendations for at least $230 billion in cuts.

Check out what Politico reported:

The House Agriculture Committee’s reconciliation proposal would save up to $300 billion over the next decade largely through cuts to the nation’s largest anti-hunger program, according to long-awaited Congressional Budget Office estimates viewed by POLITICO.

The savings from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program would be well over the committee’s instructed target of $230 billion in spending cuts, giving House Republicans just enough wiggle room to include a $60 billion farm bill package in their megabill.

The committee will meet Tuesday night to mark up its portion of the bill. Here’s how much each proposal would save between 2025 and 2034, according to the CBO:

Forcing states to pay for part of SNAP benefits based on their payment error rates saves $128 billion.
Changing work requirements, waivers and other criteria for SNAP recipients who are able-bodied adults without dependents saves $92 billion.

Limiting future updates to the Thrifty Food Plan, the basis for calculating SNAP, saves $37 billion.

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Forcing states to pay for more of SNAP administrative costs saves $27 billion.

Restrictions on participants including internet costs in computing shelter expenses saves $11 billion.
Requiring state agencies to use indications of SNAP overpayments to prevent overpayments of other federal and state benefits saves $7 billion.

Closing an internet utility loophole for SNAP participants who are not elderly or disabled saves $6 billion.
Scrapping the National Education and Obesity Prevention Program for SNAP participants saves $5 billion.
Reducing the tolerance level for SNAP error payments from $37 to $0 saves $80 million.

Changing the general SNAP work requirement age from over 15 and under 60 to over 17 and under 65 does not affect direct spending.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.

View the original article here.


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