Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
North Carolina
Showing Original Post only (View all)Weekly Memo Progress NC Action 5/23: North Carolina Can't Afford Trump's SNAP Cuts [View all]
North Carolina Cant Afford Trumps SNAP Cuts
By Matt Schlosser, Progress NC Action
progressnc.org
5/23/2025
House Republicans have passed Trumps domestic agenda, moving one step closer to enacting a plan that defunds Medicaid and SNAP in order to give massive tax breaks to the ultra-wealthy.
North Carolina would certainly feel MAGAs Medicaid cuts, but layering SNAP cuts on top of it would be a devastating 1-2 punch to working class families who are already struggling to make ends meet.
The SNAP cuts are severe, amounting to roughly 30% of SNAPs funding, an estimated $300 billion over ten years. SNAP serves over 40 million people, providing vital food assistance to working families, hungry children, aging seniors, and adults with disabilities. 1.4 million of those people live in North Carolina.
House Republicans are achieving these cuts by enacting strict, often impossible-to-meet work requirements. 64-year-olds, people living in areas with limited transportation or job opportunities, and single moms juggling child care responsibilities would need to work 80 hours a month to qualify for the program.
SNAP already requires many recipients to work at least 80 hours a month to qualify. And its already a lean program, with benefits averaging just $5.70 per person per day.
Thats just $1.90 per meal. Less than two bucks a meal for moms trying to feed ravenous teenagers. Just a couple of dollars for dads looking to put something healthy on the plate for their growing kids.
80% of North Carolinas SNAP households include someone who is actively working. 66% of SNAP households in North Carolina include children. More than 46,000 North Carolina veterans benefit from SNAP, as well as 1 in 6 people living in rural areas or small towns.
And SNAP isnt just a life-changing program for families, its a good investment in our states economy. Every $1 invested in SNAP generates between $1.50 and $1.80 for local economies. With 9,200 SNAP retailers across the state, the program has helped generate thousands of jobs and millions of dollars in wages.
Young children and hungry teenagers, aging seniors and disabled veterans, rural residents and urban dwellers, working parents and single parents these are the faces of SNAP.
Theyre your neighbors, the people in your apartment complex who are working two jobs just to pay the rent.
Theyre the kids hustling after the bus, students who just need something in their stomach so that they can focus at school throughout the day.
Theyre me and you. People who dont want handouts, but could use a hand up just so that they can get back on their feet. People who are fighting like hell to make ends meet, to provide for their families, to give something back to their communities.
Call your reps, text your friends, wave your signs, write your newspaper, post to your story do what you can to stand up against these cuts. Things are tough right now, but when we all stand together to uphold our values and support our neighbors, we win.
In Case You Missed It
WRAL: Stein requests $890 million more for Helene, says federal aid 'nothing close' to what's needed
By: Will Doran (May 19, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428587?t=11&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
WBTV: 'Violent at every level: Charlotte immigrant community calls for action as ICE arrests surge
By: Jason Puckett and Cassidy Johncoz (May 19, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428588?t=12&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
NC Newsline: 'It is a fight: Patients, OB-GYNs and sexual health advocates determined to stop Medicaid cuts
By: Kelcie Moseley-Morris (May 20, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428589?t=13&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
Time: What North Carolina Can Teach us About the 2026 Elections
By: Sean Morales-Doyle (May 21, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428590?t=14&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
News & Observer: NC budget process moves forward with House plan going to vote
By: Avi Bajpai and Caitlyn Yaede (May 21, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428591?t=15&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
Weekly Memo Progress NC Action
By Matt Schlosser of Progress NC Action
Link: progressnc.org
By Matt Schlosser, Progress NC Action
progressnc.org
5/23/2025
House Republicans have passed Trumps domestic agenda, moving one step closer to enacting a plan that defunds Medicaid and SNAP in order to give massive tax breaks to the ultra-wealthy.
North Carolina would certainly feel MAGAs Medicaid cuts, but layering SNAP cuts on top of it would be a devastating 1-2 punch to working class families who are already struggling to make ends meet.
The SNAP cuts are severe, amounting to roughly 30% of SNAPs funding, an estimated $300 billion over ten years. SNAP serves over 40 million people, providing vital food assistance to working families, hungry children, aging seniors, and adults with disabilities. 1.4 million of those people live in North Carolina.
House Republicans are achieving these cuts by enacting strict, often impossible-to-meet work requirements. 64-year-olds, people living in areas with limited transportation or job opportunities, and single moms juggling child care responsibilities would need to work 80 hours a month to qualify for the program.
SNAP already requires many recipients to work at least 80 hours a month to qualify. And its already a lean program, with benefits averaging just $5.70 per person per day.
Thats just $1.90 per meal. Less than two bucks a meal for moms trying to feed ravenous teenagers. Just a couple of dollars for dads looking to put something healthy on the plate for their growing kids.
80% of North Carolinas SNAP households include someone who is actively working. 66% of SNAP households in North Carolina include children. More than 46,000 North Carolina veterans benefit from SNAP, as well as 1 in 6 people living in rural areas or small towns.
And SNAP isnt just a life-changing program for families, its a good investment in our states economy. Every $1 invested in SNAP generates between $1.50 and $1.80 for local economies. With 9,200 SNAP retailers across the state, the program has helped generate thousands of jobs and millions of dollars in wages.
Young children and hungry teenagers, aging seniors and disabled veterans, rural residents and urban dwellers, working parents and single parents these are the faces of SNAP.
Theyre your neighbors, the people in your apartment complex who are working two jobs just to pay the rent.
Theyre the kids hustling after the bus, students who just need something in their stomach so that they can focus at school throughout the day.
Theyre me and you. People who dont want handouts, but could use a hand up just so that they can get back on their feet. People who are fighting like hell to make ends meet, to provide for their families, to give something back to their communities.
Call your reps, text your friends, wave your signs, write your newspaper, post to your story do what you can to stand up against these cuts. Things are tough right now, but when we all stand together to uphold our values and support our neighbors, we win.
In Case You Missed It
WRAL: Stein requests $890 million more for Helene, says federal aid 'nothing close' to what's needed
By: Will Doran (May 19, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428587?t=11&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
WBTV: 'Violent at every level: Charlotte immigrant community calls for action as ICE arrests surge
By: Jason Puckett and Cassidy Johncoz (May 19, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428588?t=12&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
NC Newsline: 'It is a fight: Patients, OB-GYNs and sexual health advocates determined to stop Medicaid cuts
By: Kelcie Moseley-Morris (May 20, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428589?t=13&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
Time: What North Carolina Can Teach us About the 2026 Elections
By: Sean Morales-Doyle (May 21, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428590?t=14&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
News & Observer: NC budget process moves forward with House plan going to vote
By: Avi Bajpai and Caitlyn Yaede (May 21, 2025)
https://progressnc.actionkit.com/go/428591?t=15&akid=102693%2E32604%2ENscgSk
Weekly Memo Progress NC Action
By Matt Schlosser of Progress NC Action
Link: progressnc.org
If you would like to get this Weekly Memo email delivered to you, sign up at progressnc.org.
❤️ pants
RESIST!! ✊️
3 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

Weekly Memo Progress NC Action 5/23: North Carolina Can't Afford Trump's SNAP Cuts [View all]
littlemissmartypants
May 25
OP