Dear John,
They didn’t just vote to gut programs. They voted to gut women’s lives.
Last week, in the dark of night, House Republicans passed a budget bill that slashes billions in federal spending on Medicaid, SNAP (food assistance), childcare, home energy assistance and disability support. The budget bill will cut direct support to tens of millions of working-class families—and, according to the Congressional Budget Office, millions more will lose their health insurance through changes to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace.
This is not just cruel. It’s calculated.
And it will hit women hardest.
The proposed cuts will impact millions of middle- and working-class families—but they will disproportionately harm women, especially:
For what? To pay for massive tax breaks for the richest Americans.
According to the just-released nonpartisan Penn Wharton Budget Model, the top 0.1 percent of earners—those making $4.3 million or more per year—will see their after-tax income INCREASE by an average of $389,280 in 2026. Meanwhile, Americans making less than $51,000 a year will actually see their after-tax income DECREASE. (This analysis was reported by journalist Judd Legum in Popular Information.)
This is not fiscal responsibility. It is a redistribution of wealth—from the most vulnerable to the most powerful. And it is being done at the direct expense of women’s health, safety and economic security.
Now, the bill moves to the U.S. Senate. And the question is no longer if women will be hurt. It’s how many. It’s how deeply. It’s how soon.
We have one month to stop these devastating cuts.
How?
Contact your senators—Republicans and Democrats alike—and tell them to reject these cruel, calculated cuts. Tell them to protect women, families, caregivers and our most basic support systems.
And tell your stories. As Sage Warner, the stories director at Center for American Progress, wrote for Ms. this week: “We have around one month to stop this bill from becoming law. As it moves to the Senate, we must continue building and amplifying platforms that let constituent voices permeate government decision-making—whether that takes place in the halls of Congress, via news feeds or in the inboxes of their representatives. Stories alone won’t stop bad policy. But they can challenge indifference, mobilize public pressure and drive home the real cost of cutting life-saving programs for American families.”
Have a story to tell about how cuts to healthcare or food aid would affect you or your community? We want to hear from you. Pitch your story to Ms. as an op-ed; learn more at msmagazine.com/submissions.
This is our line in the sand. Join us—in fury and in action.
For equality, peace and justice,