Over 2 million fewer people are receiving federal food assistance since Republicans in Congress cut benefits last year.
Nationwide enrollment in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program stood at 42 million in July, when President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act into law. As of December, enrollment had fallen to 39.5 million, according to data released last month.
“The program has changed in ways that we’re only now starting to see the impact of,” Joseph Llobrera, an expert on food assistance with the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, told HuffPost.
The pullback of federal food assistance could stretch family budgets amid persistent inflation that’s driven voter dissatisfaction with Republicans in special elections since last year. Republicans are widely expected to fare poorly in November’s midterm elections, and cost-of-living concerns are a key reason.
In one sense, the cuts to SNAP and Medicaid, which Republicans used to offset the cost of tax cuts tilted toward the wealthy, merely reverse expansions to those programs enacted by Democrats during the presidencies of Barack Obama and Joe Biden.






