Statement attributable to Crystal FitzSimons, president, Food Research & Action Center (FRAC)
WASHINGTON, May 14, 2025 — The House Agriculture Committee sent a clear message that the health, economic stability, and dignity of tens of millions of people in this country who struggle to put food on the table are last on their priority list. The committee’s budget reconciliation bill, passed tonight (29-25 along party lines), would slash over $300 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the nation’s most effective anti-hunger tool, and shift costs to already overburdened state and local governments. See FRAC’s analysis of the bill. Cuts to SNAP, combined with cuts to Medicaid and economic mobility programs, will lead to increased hunger and poverty.
These cuts do not exist in a vacuum. While framed as a fiscal measure, the impact of these changes would ripple across entire sectors — harming families, farmers, grocers, local governments, and local economies. This bill is a cruel attempt to drastically shrink access to critical food assistance and deter enrollment.
- Millions of people, including children, older adults, veterans, people with disabilities, and families with low incomes would face deeper food insecurity.
- Small grocers, rural economies, and local food systems would suffer, as SNAP dollars disappear from communities that rely on them.
- Grandparents, older adults, and parents with school-age children would be limited to three months of benefits in a three-year period unless they can prove they work 20 hours a week, regardless of caregiving responsibilities or other barriers.
- States would be forced to slash eligibility or reduce services to cover the cost shift from the federal government, pushing many states to cut eligibility even during economic downturns or natural disasters, when SNAP demand rises.
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The Food Research & Action Center improves the nutrition, health, and well-being of people struggling against poverty-related hunger in the United States through advocacy, partnerships, and by advancing bold and equitable policy solutions. To learn more, visit FRAC.org and follow us on X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, Instagram, Threads, and Bluesky.