John,
Once again extremists are putting the wants of their wealthy donors before the needs of the many. Their proposal to cut $5 trillion in human needs programs is nothing more than a plan meant to pay for an extension of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act―which would add $5.5 trillion to the deficit.1
Among the more severe cuts that would take food and health care away from millions over a ten-year period, House Republicans want to:2
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Cut Medicare by $479 billion
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Cut the Affordable Care Act by $151 billion, including gutting the Prevention Public Health Fund
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Eliminate climate policies from the Biden administration by $468 billion
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Cut student loan forgiveness by $200-330 billion
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Eliminate the Social Services Block Grant, $15 billion that is key for local communities
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Take the Child Tax Credit away from millions of American children from immigrant families
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Rescind $11 billion in unspent COVID money from states and localities
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Cut employee benefits for federal employees by $32 billion
These cuts are being presented as “cutting wasteful government spending,” but what they’re actually cutting are programs that tens of millions of people rely on every day.
Donate $5
today to power the fight against these cruel cuts. With a slim Republican majority, our advocacy together can flip the few votes needed to defend vulnerable communities.
Thank you for all you do,
Meredith Dodson
Senior Director of Public Policy, Coalition on Human Needs
1 The Cost and Distribution of Extending Expiring Provisions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017
2 House GOP cuts options
-- DEBORAH'S EMAIL --
John,
It’s happening. We’re less than one week from Donald Trump’s second inauguration and Republicans in Congress have proposed spending cuts that would decimate human needs programs and leave millions of people without assistance, all so they can extend expiring portions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that disproportionately benefit the highest income earners.
Republicans on the House Budget Committee are proposing $5.3+ trillion in cuts to essential programs like Medicaid, SNAP (food stamps), and the Child Tax Credit over a decade.1 $2.3 trillion of cuts would come from Medicaid alone.
Why are House Republicans proposing more than $5 trillion in cuts? Because an extension of their 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would cost virtually the same amount. A new report from the Biden administration shows that an extension of the Trump-GOP tax scam would cost $5.5 trillion―with the top 1% of income earners receiving 30% of the benefits.2
These unconscionable and extreme cuts hurt the most vulnerable in our society and would land a punishing blow to our economy, just to pay for more tax cuts for the rich. Republicans have only a slim majority and our voices and activism can make a huge difference in stopping this dangerous agenda. They just announced they intend to push the important first step for their budget plan through by the end of February, which means our work is more urgent than ever.3
Donate $5 to fight back against $5 trillion in cuts and defend critical programs for vulnerable communities.
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Other provisions in the legislation call for getting rid of the much-needed update to the Thrifty Food Program on which SNAP benefits are based and reinstating the “public charge” rule from the first Trump administration that denied entry for immigrants who are seen as likely to require federal benefits. Overall, the cuts to SNAP and other anti-poverty programs are estimated to be as high as $347 billion.
We can’t allow the new Congress and incoming administration to undo all the progress we’ve worked so hard to achieve. These cruel cuts must not become law. If we demand that Democrats hold the line, and we peel off just a few Republicans, we can stop them.
Donate $5 today to power our advocacy and activism and stop this legislation in its tracks.
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Thank you for all you do,
Deborah Weinstein
Executive Director, Coalition on Human Needs
1 House Budget Committee Spending Reform Outline
2 The Cost and Distribution of Extending Expiring Provisions of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017
3 Johnson wants budget blueprint passed by Feb. 27