Medicaid, SNAP and Trump
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Older adults and low-income people will have a tougher time accessing food assistance and healthcare services under the House Republicans’ tax bill that will now likely face changes in the Senate. The roughly 1,
U.S. Rep. Ryan Mackenzie joined the vast majority of House Republicans in voting in favor of President Trump’s multitrillion-dollar tax breaks package early Thursday morning, which now needs
The United States House of Representatives on May 22, 2025, narrowly approved a far-reaching budget reconciliation package that if enacted would sever at least tens of thousands of West Virginians’ access to health and social safety net programs.
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Lashing out at Republicans for proposing to “rip away” Medicaid and SNAP benefits from Pennsylvanians, Gov. Josh Shapiro said Friday that the commonwealth would be unable to replace lost funding for those programs should President Donald Trump‘s so-called big,
House Republicans are looking to push through a package of tax breaks and spending cuts to advance Trump’s agenda.
Arkansas’s four Republican congressmen voted yes on the bill, despite the fact it’s expected to slash food and health benefits for vast numbers of their own constituents if it becomes law.
A new non-partisan report reveals that President Trump's recently passed bill could result in 3.2 million people losing their SNAP benefits and 8 million people losing health coverage through Medicaid over the next decade.
New Jersey would lose about $3.6 billion a year in federal Medicaid funding, and more than 300,000 residents would risk losing their health insurance.