Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins this week attributed a multimillion-person drop in the number of participants receiving food stamps through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program to the tamping down of fraud and an improved economy. It is true that SNAP beneficiaries decreased by nearly 4.
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Tips for making a mint julep worthy of the Kentucky DerbyInside 'Scientology speedruns,' the viral trend prompting the church to bolster securityAgriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins testifies before the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies hearing on the Agriculture Department budget for fiscal year 2027 on Capitol Hill, Wednesday, April 22, 2026, in Washington. a multimillion-person drop in the number of participants receiving food stamps through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program to the tamping down of fraud and an improved economy.
But experts discount those factors, saying the primary driver of the decrease was more likely new legislation that changed how the program runs. ROLLINS: “As of just a couple of days ago, we now have moved 4.3 million Americans off of the food stamp program. A lot of that is fraud. A lot of it is people taking the program that shouldn’t have been.
And a lot of it is just a better economy. We’ve had wage growth that has outpaced inflation for the first time since early 2021. This is a really big day. So people don’t need food stamps.
”released by the Agriculture Department. However, experts say new requirements mandated by a massive tax and spending cut bill Republicans“What we’ve seen in terms of the data is that the trend in participation declines seems to be related to the program being harder to access,” said Roger Figueroa, an assistant professor at Cornell University who studies food insecurity from a public health perspective.
Fraud within the SNAP is small, according to experts — not nearly enough to account for such a significant drop.. That includes people who erroneously reported information during the application process and people who exchanged benefits for cash or other noneligible items. Out of 42,176,946 total participants that’s less than 1%.
“I don’t see any evidence supporting a significant reduction in fraud as a driver of what we’re seeing as far as declining SNAP participation,” said Caitlin Caspi, an associate professor at the University of Connecticut who studies food insecurity. Asked for data to support Rollins’ claim about fraud’s relationship to the decrease of SNAP beneficiaries, the USDA directed The Associated Press to reporting from the.
SNAP applicants in most states may be eligible for SNAP using this policy if they qualify for non-cash benefits from the federal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program or similar state-run efforts.for allowing states too much flexibility in determining who is eligible for SNAP by removing asset maximums, using a higher limit for gross income or both. The Trump administrationThe U.S. economy generally performed strongly in 2025 after getting off to a bumpy start.
Gross domestic product shrank for the first time in three years during the first quarter, but growth rebounded in the second half of the year. It slowed in the“We have a persistent poverty problem in this country,” said Kate Bauer, an associate professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Michigan.
“And we have huge economic disparities. And most people, even in good economic times, are not able to pull their families out of poverty. ”, at 3.3%, in March, though it was not the first time since 2021, as Rollins claimed. And yet in 2025 higher-income Americans benefited more than lower-income households, which struggled with weaker income gains and steep prices.
Plus, “We’re not seeing a linear kind of drop-off,” said Caspi.
“We are not seeing, if you look at the unemployment rates, things that might be an indicator that a strong economy was driving this change. We don’t see, for example, a pattern of decline in unemployment that would match the pattern of decline in SNAP participation. ”Experts say some of the biggest drivers in the drop of SNAP participants were changes made in the 940-page “One Big Beautiful Bill Act,” also known asfor eligibility.
General rules apply to most people age 16-59, but able-bodied adults without dependents must follow stricter guidelines —- made even stricter by H.R. 1 —- unless they qualify for an exemption. Participants can meet the more stringent requirements by working or participating in a work program for at least 80 hours a month. They do not need to be paid. Previously, able-bodied adults older than 54 without dependents were exempt from the enhanced requirements.
That age has been raised to 64. And the bill lowered the age of children whom a person is responsible for to qualify for an exemption from 18 to 14. Homeless people, veterans and former foster children 24 or younger are no longer exempt either.
“Families have lots of really complicated situations and you can’t just say to people, in 10 days or in one month, go find 80 hours a week of work when you don’t have the skills and those jobs aren’t available in your community,” said Bauer. In January 2025, when Trump was sworn in as president for his second term, there were approximately 42.83 million SNAP participants. That number dropped nearly 10% by January 2026, to about 38.55 million.
The majority of the decline occurred in the second half of the year, afterH. R. 1 in July. There was a decrease of just 743,572 people from January 2025 to June 2025 and one of about 3.47 million from July 2025 to January 2026.that certain provisions would “reduce participation in SNAP by roughly 2.4 million people in an average month over the 2025-2034 period.
” “It shouldn’t be surprising that we are seeing this decline and it shouldn’t be a leap in logic to think that these declines are attributable to H.R. 1. ,” said Caspi. Trump says he’ll place 25% tariff on autos from the EU, accusing it of not complying with trade deal
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