Connecticut Officials Decry Federal Budget’s Impact
Leaders warn of health care, SNAP, and safety net cuts.
Connecticut officials are sounding the alarm about the potential harm to health care access and state finances because of the recently enacted federal budget law. They say significant cuts are coming to key programs.
Lamont Blasts “Reckless and Mean-Spirited” Budget
During a press conference held at Hartfordโs Charter Oak Health Center, a federally supported facility, Gov. Ned Lamont criticized the budget. He said the measure would slash $13 billion from the stateโs Medicaid program over the next 10 years.
According to Lamont, the budget would also shift SNAP administration costs to the state and trigger automatic Medicare cuts. He accused federal lawmakers of fiscal irresponsibility.
โNo Republican who voted for this bill can ever use the words โfiscal conservativeโ with a straight face,โ
said Lamont. โWeโve been paying down pension debt. We have an honestly balanced budget. Theyโre not doing that in Washington.โ
He also warned the new law would destabilize vital programs families rely on, like home health care and early education.
In addition, the governor challenged Connecticut Republicans to state their position on the federal budget. House Republican Leader Vincent Candelora, in a statement, disagreed with the Democratsโ assessment. He argued the budget represented a move toward a more affordable government that โdelivers real relief to working families.โ
Medicaid and SNAP Changes
Andrea Barton Reeves, Commissioner of Social Services, noted that Connecticut provides Medicaid coverage to over 1 million residents, including 300,000 children. She stated the state has already allocated $80 million to its network of federally qualified health centers.
To blunt the impact of the federal cuts, Barton Reeves said that the state is preparing to implement the new six-month Medicaid work-reporting requirement. The Urban Institute, though, estimates that similar policies could cause 1.1 million to 2.9 million people to lose Medicaid coverage nationwide (Urban Institute, 2023).
Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz criticized the work-reporting requirement as โpunishment by paperwork,โ
designed to create red tape and remove people from coverage.
The SNAP program, serving approximately 355,000 Connecticut households, is also set to transition into a state-administered program, resulting in a significant administrative and fiscal change.
Federal Deficit and Medicare Cuts
Rep. Joe Courtney emphasized the intentional financial and political design of the bill. Because the bill adds $5 trillion to the federal deficit, automatic cuts are triggered under the PAYGO law. This includes an estimated 4% cut to all Medicare providers. According to Courtney, the law would slice $535 billion from Medicare and $1 trillion from Medicaid nationwide.
Rep. John Larson pointed to misleading claims already circulating, and said people have โbeen lied to. And eventually, theyโre going to realize whatโs going on โ and theyโre going to be mad as hell.โ

Broader Economic Concerns
Sen. Richard Blumenthal described the budget as a โPyrrhic victoryโ
for Republicans, warning of broader consequences. โThis is the biggest transfer of wealth from poor to rich in the history of America,โ
he said. โAnd make no mistake โ the cost of everything will rise. Food, housing, borrowing. The middle class is being disassembled before our eyes.โ
State Comptroller Sean Scanlon stated that โhistory has always shown this trickle-down economics just doesnโt work,โ
but added, โWe got your back. Weโre not going to let the people of Connecticut fall through the cracks.โ
Related Developments
Advocates Say Federal Budget Cuts Could Reverse Progress On Opioid-Related Deaths
HARTFORD, CT โ While overdose-related deaths in Connecticut are on the decline โ the number dropped last year to 982, a 26% reduction from 2023 and the third straight annual decrease โ that progress is under threat, according to many who work to prevent such deaths.
Lamont, 22 Other Governors Urge Congress To Maintain Food Assistance Program
HARTFORD, CT โ Governor Ned Lamont is one of 23 state governors that sent a letter to Congressional leadership urging them to support the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which puts food on the table for millions of Americans, and warning that current proposals under consideration in Congress threaten the ability of states to continueโฆ
Blumenthal Urges Younger Adults To Get Cancer Screenings
HARTFORD, CT โ Citing what they called an โunspeakable tragedy,โ health officials were joined by Sen. Richard Blumenthal this week to raise the alarm about increasing rates of cancer for younger Americans.


