Senate GOP unveil long-awaited SNAP proposals for Trump bill
Source: The Hill
06/11/25 11:14 PM ET
Senate Republicans on Wednesday rolled out a suite of proposed changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) as a key component of President Trumps big beautiful bill but it dials back some of the proposals sought by the House that drew intraparty concerns.
The new legislative text from the Senate would require states to cover some of the cost of SNAP benefits, which are currently completely funded by the federal government, if they have a payment error rate above 6 percent beginning in fiscal 2028, while allowing states with rates below that level to continue paying zero percent.
It also proposes states with higher payment error rates cover a greater share of benefit costs. If the error rate is 6 percent or higher, states would be subject to a sliding scale that could see its share of allotments rise to a range of between 5 percent to 15 percent.
The House, by contrast, called for all states to cover 5 percent of the cost of allotments in its agricultural proposal passed as part of a broader plan to advance Trumps tax agenda last month, with states that had higher payment error rates having to pay anywhere between 15 to 25 percent. The softened proposal comes as Senate Republicans expressed concerns about how the House pitch would have impacted states.
Read more: https://thehill.com/business/budget/5345756-senate-gop-unveil-snap-proposals-trump-bill/

nwduke
(416 posts)The chump is throwing a 45 million dollar party for himself!🤬
bucolic_frolic
(50,801 posts)The GOP are not a serious governing party. Any CPA would laugh at such a plan.
OrlandoDem2
(2,888 posts)sinkingfeeling
(55,491 posts)Highest was Alaska with 59.59% and New Jersey with 33.48%.
LauraInLA
(2,154 posts)sinkingfeeling
(55,491 posts)The individual state payment error rates measure the accuracy of each states eligibility and benefit determinations while the national performance measure or national payment error rate represents the average of these rates, weighted by state caseload sizes. Payment errors include both underpayments and overpayments.
LauraInLA
(2,154 posts)Mr.Bee
(815 posts)When you have to needlessly cut away at government it is a clear indication
there's something wrong with this trickle down system!!