Tennessee Rep. Tim Burchett called for banning soft drinks from the federal food stamps program, known as SNAP, in a post on X that quickly drew strong reactions from users across the political spectrum.
The Republican congressman from Tennessee’s 2nd District shared the proposal on Monday, drawing significant attention with people debating nutrition assistance rules, taxpayer spending, and government priorities.
Rep. Tim Burchett (@timburchett) posted the proposal on X. In the clip, Burchett says he plans to go to the House floor shortly to present a farm bill that would ban soft drinks from the program. He argues the program is supposed to provide nutrition “in no shape, form, or fashion,” questions why taxpayers should fund soft drinks through food stamps, and calls the current policy ridiculous.
Burchett adds that Type 2 diabetes is almost 100% preventable and references its prevalence among children, while noting he personally enjoys cold drinks, but still doesn’t think taxpayers should have to pay for other people to buy it through food stamps. The video shows only his remarks with no additional interactions.
Public Reactions to Burchett’s Proposal
Some users supported the idea, with one writing, “I like it!! Ban it all and add drug testing to even receive food stamps! ” Another commented, “Ban all food stamps at the federal level, as all are unconstitutional. BUT…. IF WE HAVE TO LIVE WITH THEM, rice and beans only.”
Others pushed back, including one who said, “I hope you support giving an increase in benefits, then so people can afford to buy healthy drinks for themselves and their children. Or do you think they don’t deserve to be able to buy drinks at all?”
Several replies highlighted other priorities, such as “Don’t want struggling people to be able to drink a soda but willing to give your money to Israel” and “Tennessee is in the top three for violent crime in the US, and you’re worried about restricting SNAP benefits.”
The proposal has added to the ongoing national debate over how federal food assistance dollars should be spent. Whether Burchett’s push to restrict soft drinks in the farm bill gains traction in Congress remains to be seen.







