The 2024 election is more than a year away, but we got a glimpse into the priorities of House Republicans last week, when the Republican Study Committee (RSC) released its proposed budget for the 2024 fiscal year, a 167-page document that calls for making cuts to Social Security and Medicare, eliminating free school meals for kids, and a whole lot more.
The RSC is a group of conservative House members that was formed in 1973 and includes about three-quarters of House Republicans, including 176 lawmakers from 38 states. The Michigan representatives on the committee are Rep. Jack Bergman, Rep. Bill Huizenga, Rep. John James, Rep. Lisa C. McClain, Rep. John R. Moolenaar, and Rep. Tim Walberg.
The sheer size of the RSC effectively makes the groupโs budget document a reliable indicator of where the larger House GOP caucus stands on key issues.
Here are five of the most notable proposals in the RSCโs new budget:ย
Gutting Social Security and Medicare
For years, congressional Republicans have repeatedly tried to cut and/or privatize Medicare and Social Security, but have failed amid staunch Democratic resistance to such efforts.
With the release of the Republican Study Committeeโs budget, Republicans have ramped back up their attacks on these programs.ย
The proposed budget would make cuts to Social Security by raising the retirement age, though it does not specifically say what that new retirement age would be. Benefits would also be reduced for those who earned a โhigher salaryโ before retirement, but the budget again does not specify what that threshold would be. The budget also assures that there would only be โmodest adjustmentsโ to Social Security as it operates now, but again, does not outline exactly what that means.
โThe budget fearmongers about Social Securityโs modest shortfall (still a decade away) but then rules out any options for raising revenue, such as requiring billionaires to contribute even a penny more,โ Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, a nonprofit which aims to expand social programs, said in a statement. โThat leaves benefit cuts as the only โsolution.โ In other words, they want to cut benefits now to avoid cutting them later, which isnโt a solution at all.โย
The budget also proposes requiring disabled people to wait longer before they can access Medicare benefits. GOP lawmakers are in favor of turning Medicare into a โpremium support system,โ where seniors would instead receive a subsidy they could use on private plans competing against traditional Medicare. This could lead to thousands of dollars in additional out of pocket costs for American seniors across the United States, and would siphon Medicare funds to private insurance companies.ย
โPremium support ends the Medicare guarantee,โ Social Security Works said in itsย statement. โInstead, seniors must fend for themselves on the open market with nothing but a coupon to offset as much of the cost of the insurance that they can find.โย
Making Trumpโs Tax Cuts Permanent
In February, a group of more than 70 House Republicans introduced legislation that would make former President Donald Trumpโs 2017 tax cuts for individualsโwhich primarily benefited the super richโpermanent.ย
The Republican Study Committeeโs Budget also wants to make the individual provisions of Trumpโs tax cutsโwhich gave a roughly $49,000 tax cut to the top 1%, and only $500 to those in the bottom 60%โpermanent. Doing so, according to a Congressional Budget Office analysis, would cost around $2.2 trillion through 2032, spiking the national debt. A Tax Policy Center analysis also estimated that the extension would deliver an average tax cut of $175,710 to the richest 0.1%.
The budget also proposes eliminating the estate tax, which only impacts those who inherit assets worth at least $13 million.
Banning Universal Free School Mealsย
Many states across the country have passed legislationโor are in the process of passing legislationโthat would provide universal free school meals to children, a proven way to reduce childhood hunger, improve studentsโ health and academic performance, and save families money on groceries.
In February, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer proposed a state budget that would include $160 million in funding for universal free school meals for the 2023-24 school year. The proposal still needs to pass both chambers of the legislature and get Whitmerโs signature before becoming law, however.
The Republican Study Committeeโs budget aims to put a stop to such measures. It specifically states that eliminating the Community Eligibility Provision, or CEP, from the National School Lunch Program, is a priority. The budget states that this is because โCEP allows certain schools to provide free school lunches regardless of the individual eligibility of each student.โย
Not every school in the United States even participates in this program. In reality, itโs a meal service program reserved for qualifying schools and districts in low-income areas. It allows for American children from low-income backgrounds to eat during their school day, without schools having to collect household applications, or โmeans-testโ their students, which effectively means limiting eligibility for certain populations due to their income.ย
Means-testing has also been shown to inadvertently exclude people who are eligible for certain programs due to the red tape that is created by implementing such income limits and tests. And as Vox notes, โmeans testing has also long been associated with a moral argument that some segments of the population are deserving of government benefits, while others are not.โ
Research has also shown that the CEP program โimproves food security and nutritional outcomesโ for children. The Republican Study Committee Budget aims to put a stop to that.ย
New Work Requirements for Federal Programs and Cutting Benefits
The RSC budget also calls for โall federal benefit programs [to] be reformed to include work promotion requirements.โ Certain requirements have always had to be met to be eligible for these programs, but the RSC budget extends them so dramatically that millions of Americans could be at risk of losing key aid they need to survive.ย
For example, the budget references the โsignificantly lower labor force participation rate of 64.6% for those aged 55-64,โ and states that the solution to this โproblemโ is extending work requirements for this group of people. As The New Republic notes, there could be any number of reasons why fewer people in that age group are working: physical or mental health issues, needing to help take care of family, and more.ย
Instead of addressing any of those issues, the budget proposes that the solution is having older Americans work more in order to qualify for certain federal benefits.ย
These programs include the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (which helps 41 million Americans feed their families every year). The budget also proposes instead that SNAP be converted into a โdiscretionary block grant,โ given to states based on rates of unemployment, poverty, and the length of time beneficiaries receive aid.ย
While Republicans have long embraced block grants, economic experts have pointed out that because funding levels for block grants are typically fixed, thereโs no flexibility to increase funding to respond to recessions, natural disasters, or simple increases in demand for a program.ย
For example, if statesโ SNAP programs were funded via block grants during the pandemicโwhen millions more families needed food aid and relied on the programโit would have made it more difficult for the government to actually respond to the crises by boosting SNAP benefits, as they did. In a scenario where SNAP was funded via block grants, states would have either had to cut eligibility or benefits, or take on the higher costs.ย
Weakening Environmental Protectionsย
Smog from Canadian wildfires enveloped the East Coast earlier this month. Thousands of dead fish washed up on Texasโ Gulf Coast last week. The earth is warmer now than itโs been in 800,000 years.
While this is all happeningโand instead of proposing solutionsโthe Republican Study Committeeโs budget wants to reinstate former president Trumpโs deregulatory executive orders, which include a range of orders related to environmental protection.ย
For example, the Trump administration replaced the Clean Power Plan, which helped reduce electricity sector greenhouse gas emissions, with the Affordable Clean Energy rule, which did not set greenhouse gas emission guidelines for states using emission performance rates. An analysis conducted by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) found that unlike the Clean Power Plan, the ACE rule would increase CO2 emissions by over 60 million short tons by 2030.
The Trump administration also lifted oil and natural gas extraction bans. According to the World Wildlife Fund, oil and gas exploration and development โcauses disruption of migratory pathways, degradation of important animal habitats, and oil spillsโwhich can be devastating to the animals and humans who depend on these ecosystems.โ
Trumpโs administration also weakened the Coal Ash Rule, which regulates the disposal of toxic coal waste. Without regulation, coal waste can pollute waterways, ground water, drinking water, and the air, according to the EPA.
The Republican Study Committeeโs budget proposes that these environmental risks, and many more, be reinstated.



















