The New Tax Law Cuts Food and Health Care for Millions — While Giving Billionaires a $1 Trillion Break
Based on 2025-26 tax analysis, budget legislation and policy research
One Big Beautiful Bill — 80% of Tax Cuts Go to the Top 10%
Bottom 20% get <1%
Medicaid Gutted — 12 Million Americans Lose Health Coverage
Funds wealthy tax cuts
22 Million Families Face SNAP Food Assistance Cuts
Pays for billionaire tax breaks
IRS Enforcement Gutted — Wealthy Tax Evaders Escape Scrutiny
Wage earners can’t opt out
Middle Class Will Pay $900 More — Wealthy to Save $1 Trillion+
Top 1% saves $1T+ over 10 yrs
Sources: Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP), Urban Institute, Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Kiplinger, CNBC, NBC News — analysis published 2025–2026. Note: Republicans dispute some findings, arguing tax cuts benefit working-class Americans through broader economic growth and measures like no-tax-on-tips provisions. Claude.ai contributed to this graphic and commentary.
It’s true: You’re paying more so billionaires pay less. Tax cuts ad redistribution of wealth are things of which we all should be aware. It’s been slightly less than a year since The One Big Beautiful Bill was signed into law. It’s important to take a look back at that piece of legislation other ways in which the middle and lower class are making life even easier for billionaires.
Here is more on the infographic above. This focuses on only five tax cuts and redistribution strategies. There are many more:
1. The One Big Beautiful Bill
The One Big Beautiful Bill (other folks have some radically different names for the law) delivers most of its tax benefits to the wealthy. Independent analyses found that more than 70% of net tax cuts flow to the richest fifth of Americans. That’s followed by the middle fifth, which receives approximately 10%. The poorest fifth less than 1%. The data says the top 10% receive about 80% of total tax breaks. Middle-income families see mixed results and lower-income Americans generally lose once cuts to Medicaid and SNAP are factored in.
2. Medicaid Suffers
To fund tax cuts for the wealthy, the bill takes an axe to Medicaid. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says that about 12 million people will lose coverage. Lower-income families, children, seniors and people with disabilities are most affected. The legislation is projected to add at least $3.3 trillion to the national deficit during the next decade. Health coverage losses will be concentrated entirely among those who are least able to afford the loss.
3. Sapping SNAP
The same legislation dramatically restructures the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) program (food stamps). About 22.3 million families are set to lose some or all benefits, per the Urban Institute. States unable to absorb new cost-sharing requirements that require states to cover 5% to 15% of benefit costs if their payment error rate exceeds 6% may reduce or exit the program. SNAP currently serves more than 40 million people including children, seniors and adults with disabilities.
4. Cutting the IRS
The administration has drastically cut IRS staffing and enforcement capacity. Analysts say that this disproportionately benefits the ultra-wealthy with access to complex tax-avoidance schemes that are difficult to detect without robust enforcement. Ordinary wage earners have taxes withheld automatically and cannot opt out. The Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy (ITEP) notes the drastic cuts promotes tax lawlessness. This able to engage in complicated, hard-to-detect evasion schemes now better positioned than ever to do so.
5. Tariffs and Expiring Credits
ITEP analysis finds middle-income Americans face taxes increases of about $900 this year compared to the pre-2025 baselines. This largely is due to tariffs and expiring credits. Meanwhile, the top 1% are set to pay at least $1 trillion less over the next decade. The wealth of the top 1% of Americans grew at nearly three times the rate of the bottom 90% in 2025. The gap now is the largest it’s been in a generation or more— and it still is growing.