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Republicans in Congress want to cut the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps, by $300 billion, which would affect 700,000 families in Georgia.
The House-passed Republican reconciliation plan would cut nearly $300 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance ...
Congressional Republicans are moving quickly to pass a mammoth tax and spending cuts package that could have a direct impact ...
Sen. Josh Hawley is a deeply conservative and decidedly ambitious Republican from Missouri who hopes to run for president. In an extraordinary essay for The New York Times, he broke sharply from ...
In the Ohio House’s version of the budget bill, Ohio would eliminate Group VIII — another name for the Medicaid expansion group that covers more than 700,000 Ohioans who live above the income ...
These cuts will mean fewer seniors able to afford prescriptions. More families going without food. Fewer veterans accessing needed care. And more people falling through the cracks when they need help ...
Cook County Public Health and Human Services got some good news recently, as previously rescinded COVID-19 Grant funds were ...
The extent to which it is “beautiful” is in the eye of the beholder. To be fair, some provisions of the bill would benefit western Coloradans. The bill makes permanent multiple tax breaks from the ...
Clocking in at 1,118 pages, the recently passed House budget bill certainly lives up to at least one part of its name. Dubbed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the legislation extends some tax ...
Earlier this month, Idaho Gov. Brad Little said he had thoughts on the “big, beautiful bill” advancing through Congress. To extend 2017 tax cuts, the bill would deeply cut federal spending for ...
Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' promising tax cuts and federal program reductions could cost Oklahoma upwards of $1 billion due to Medicaid and SNAP cuts. State lawmakers discuss potential implications.
However, SNAP recipients in North Carolina expressed concerns over federal funding cuts to the program, which the Congressional Budget Office pegs at nearly $300 billion through 2034.