Food stamps are on the chopping block in the House, where Republicans are threatening to cut $39 billion from the program over the next decade.
But the results will be immediate. If the law passes, 3.8 million people could lose their benefits in 2014 alone, according to a report from the Congressional Budget Office.
The cuts go even further than what Republicans first proposed — $20.5 billion — earlier this year in the Farm Bill.
The new bill also imposes additional restrictions on eligibility, like passing E-Verify, a government-run program built to determine whether job applicants are eligible to work in the United States. Critics say E-Verify is unacceptably error-prone, which can lead citizens or legal immigrants to be mistakenly identified as undocumented immigrants. Only certain kinds of immigrants are currently eligible to receive food stamps, and applicants are already required to verify their immigration status.
A spokesperson for Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, the California Republican who proposed the measure, declined to identify any gaps in the current immigrant screening procedures. “He simply wants to make sure there are no gaps,” he said in an email.









