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"path": "/2026/05/22/snap-cuts-trump-republicans-budget-fy-2027/",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-22T19:39:47.000Z",
"site": "https://msmagazine.com",
"tags": [
"Health",
"Justice & Law",
"National",
"Congress",
"Hunger and Food Insecurity",
"Motherhood",
"Single Mothers",
"What Trump’s Budget Means for Women (Series)",
"Women in Politics",
"After Historic SNAP Cuts, America’s Hunger Emergency Is Already Here—and Trump’s Proposed Budget Would Make It Worse",
"Ms. Magazine"
],
"textContent": "Even as communities across the country grapple with the fallout from last year’s devastating SNAP cuts, the White House’s proposed Fiscal Year 2027 budget threatens to deepen an already escalating hunger emergency.\n\nThe administration is pushing another $6 billion in cuts to SNAP, while also targeting WIC benefits, including proposals that would restrict access to fresh fruits and vegetables for women and children.\n\nRather than repairing the damage already done to America’s food assistance programs, the budget doubles down on policies that are pushing more families toward crisis.\n\nThe consequences are already unfolding nationwide. More than 4 million Americans have lost SNAP benefits over the past year, while states struggle under the unprecedented financial burdens shifted onto them by Republicans’ earlier cuts.\n\nSome states are now considering whether they can continue participating in SNAP at all, raising the possibility that millions more people could lose food assistance simply because of where they live.\n\nAt the same time, congressional negotiations over the farm bill have largely failed to address the growing strain on hunger programs or the widening cracks in the nation’s social safety net.\n\n**(This essay is part of an ongoing _Ms._ series examining the real-world impact of President Donald Trump’s proposed fiscal year 2027 budget. Across sectors—from healthcare and childcare to immigration enforcement and food assistance—the series explores what the administration’s funding priorities reveal about who government serves, and who it leaves behind.)**\n\nThe post After Historic SNAP Cuts, America’s Hunger Emergency Is Already Here—and Trump’s Proposed Budget Would Make It Worse appeared first on Ms. Magazine.",
"title": "After Historic SNAP Cuts, America’s Hunger Emergency Is Already Here—and Trump’s Proposed Budget Would Make It Worse"
}