Congressional Republicans have set a “slow-rolling avalanche” tumbling toward their own constituents and state-level colleagues as they desperately tried to deflect blame for passing Donald Trump’s budget bill, an analyst wrote Tuesday.
Trump’s freshly signed law represents a masterclass in political buck-passing, MSNBC’s Hayes Brown wrote. It shifts the burden of maintaining America’s social safety net from Washington to cash-strapped states — including many deep red ones — while millions face losing access to food and healthcare benefits.
The legislation hammers both Medicaid and SNAP food stamps with brutal new work requirements and administrative red tape designed to kick people off assistance, Brown pointed out. States now face the impossible task of building complex software systems by 2026 to track eligibility for aid — a recipe for glitches that could leave eligible families without healthcare or food.
But here’s the real kicker, Brown wrote. States will now pay up to 25% of SNAP costs based on their error rates. That’s roughly $3 billion hitting Missouri and South Carolina over the next decade, while Florida faces a staggering $15 billion hit.
The more mistakes overworked state employees make, the more their states pay, the columnist wrote.
“States will pay deeply for any errors related to SNAP especially,” he wrote. “Under the new budget law, states will be required to cover at least 5%, and up to 25%, of the total cost of SNAP benefits for their residents. The formula is based on each state’s payment error rates, or the amount it accidentally overpaid or underpaid its beneficiaries.
” … The full impact will vary from state to state, but the overall picture isn’t good. Many state governments were desperately searching for ways to balance their budgets for reasons that had nothing to do with this looming exodus of federal dollars — and then the Trump administration heaped uncertainty on top of that.”
The healthcare devastation runs deeper. Reduced Medicaid enrollment could shutter rural hospitals, while the elimination of “provider taxes” — used by nearly every state to boost federal matching funds — threatens to close even more medical facilities in underserved areas.
Democrat-led states are bracing for disaster, with California facing a potential $20 billion budget deficit and New York expecting tens of billions in red ink,” Brown wrote.
But red states aren’t immune: Maine faces a $649 million budget hole, while Kentucky would need an additional $253 million just to maintain current SNAP enrollment — more than they spend on two major universities combined.
A twist of this strategy lies in its timing, Brown wrote. Republicans carefully backloaded the worst effects until after the 2026 midterms, giving themselves cover while forcing governors and state lawmakers to become “accomplices in pain.”
As immigration crackdowns potentially trigger economic slowdowns and increase demand for assistance, states will find themselves caught in a vicious cycle — needing to provide more help with less federal support.
Trump and congressional Republicans have essentially turned state governments into their enforcers, drafting them to “do the dirty work of stripping people of the help they need to survive” while Washington washes its hands of responsibility, Brown wrote.
“In their rush to pass a bill to support Trump’s arbitrary deadline, congressional Republicans have set a slow-rolling avalanche tumbling toward their own constituents and state-level colleagues.”