July 2025: Miller Voted For The Senate FY 2025 Budget Reconciliation Bill That Extended $4 Trillion In Expiring Tax Cuts, Added New Tax Breaks, Appropriated $448 Billion In Defense, Border, And Immigration Enforcement Funding, Increased The SALT Deduction To $40,000, And Cut Medicaid And Other Social Programs To Offset The Costs. In July 2025, Miller voted for, according to Congressional Quarterly, the “motion to concur in the Senate amendment to the bill that would permanently extend nearly $4 trillion in expiring individual and business tax cuts, create several new tax breaks and fund border and immigration enforcement and air traffic control upgrades. It would cut Medicaid and other safety net programs to partly offset the cost. Among other provisions, it would raise the statutory debt ceiling by $5 trillion and appropriate more than $448 billion in mandatory funding for Trump administration priorities and other needs, including $153 billion for defense, $89 billion for immigration enforcement, and $89.5 billion for border control and security. It also would increase the state and local tax deduction cap to $40,000 annually for five years for households making up to $500,000 a year until 2030, when it would permanently revert to $10,000.” The House passed the bill by a vote of 218 to 214. [House Vote 190, 7/3/25; Congressional Quarterly, 7/3/25; Congressional Actions, H.R. 1]
2025: Miller Voted For The FY 2025 Budget Reconciliation Bill That Included $3.8 Trillion In Tax Cuts Offset By $1.5 Trillion In Spending Reductions To Programs Like Medicaid And The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. In May 2025, Miller voted for, according to Congressional Quarterly, “the bill that would provide for approximately $3.8 trillion in net tax cuts and $321 billion in military, border enforcement and judiciary spending, offset by $1.5 trillion in spending reductions, as instructed in the fiscal 2025 budget resolution (H Con Res 14). It would raise the statutory debt limit by $4 trillion and provide for increased spending on defense and border security, spending cuts on social safety net programs, such as Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. It also includes a mix of tax breaks for businesses and individuals; tax increases on universities and foundations; and a phase-down of clean energy tax credits. […] It would reduce federal spending on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by requiring states to shoulder more of the cost, expand work requirements for SNAP, extend programs authorized under the 2018 farm bill, and prohibit the U.S. Department of Agriculture from increasing the cost of the Thrifty Food Program. As amended, it would cap state and local tax deductions at $40,000 for households with incomes below $500,000.” The House passed the bill by a vote of 215 to 214. [House Vote 145, 5/22/25; Congressional Quarterly, 5/22/25; Congressional Actions, H.R. 1]
2025: Miller Voted For The FY 2025 Budget Framework That Included $2 Trillion In Cuts, Raised The Statutory Debt Limit By $4 Trillion, And Required House Committees To Recommend Legislation That Would Implement Trump’s Agenda. In February 2025, Miller voted for, according to Congressional Quarterly, “the concurrent resolution that would recommend a budget for fiscal 2025 and budget levels through fiscal 2034. The resolution would assume minimum savings of $1.5 trillion over 10 years and 2.6 percent economic growth over the same period. It also would require the statutory debt limit to be raised by $4 trillion. It also would authorize the House Ways and Means Committee to increase deficits by $4.5 trillion over 10 years to extend the 2017 tax cuts and implement new tax cuts proposed by the White House. It also would provide instructions for the budget reconciliation process through which separate legislation could be considered and passed in the Senate via a simple majority vote. The measure would deliver instructions to 11 House committees to report legislation that would implement President Donald Trump’s agenda, such as expanding tax cuts and bolstering border security and immigration enforcement. The committees would be required to report their legislative recommendations to the House Budget Committee by March 27, 2025. It also would set a $2 trillion target for the spending cuts to be submitted to the House Budget Committee. The resolution also would stipulate that if the committees don't reach that target, the Ways and Means’ reconciliation instructions to increase the deficit by a maximum of $4.5 trillion would be decreased by the amount the other committees come in below the target. Similarly, it would stipulate that Ways and Means could increase the deficit above the $4.5 trillion level by the amount of savings the committees achieve above the $2 trillion target.” The vote was on passage. The House passed the resolution by a vote of 217 to 215. [House Vote 50, 2/25/25; Congressional Quarterly, 2/25/25; Congressional Actions, H. Con. Res. 14]
2024: 21,126 Households In Ohio’s 7th Congressional District Relied On SNAP. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
[U.S. Department of Agriculture, SNAP Community Characteristics, Viewed 4/13/26]
Miller Cosponsored A Bill To Enforce Stricter Work Requirements For SNAP Benefits, Which, If Passed, Would Have Made It Harder For Americans To Access Food Stamps. According to USA Today, "Nearly two dozen Republicans are trying to make it harder for Americans to receive food stamps, introducing a bill Tuesday that would change eligibility requirements for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program or SNAP benefits. […]What does Johnson's SNAP bill do? Johnson's bill, the America Works Act, reforms the work requirements for able-bodied adults without children who are receiving SNAP benefits. It raises the maximum age for work requirements from 49 to 65 It cuts down on a state's ability to waive work requirements It emphasizes work requirements for able-bodied adults without children ‘Work is the best pathway out of poverty,’ Johnson said. […]Who is cosponsoring the SNAP bill? The bill's Republican cosponsors include: North Carolina Reps. Chuck Edwards, Virginia Foxx, Richard Hudson Ohio Reps. Warren Davidson, Max Miller Texas Reps. Jake Ellzey, August Pfluger, Troy Nehls, Pat Fallon, Randy Weber, Michael Cloud Illinois Rep. Mary Miller Colorado Rep. Doug Lamborn Oregon Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer Oklahoma Rep. Josh Brecheen Virginia Rep. Jen Kiggans Iowa Rep. Randy Feenstra Montana Rep. Ryan Zinke Missouri Rep. Mark Alford Tennessee Rep. Andy Ogles Wisconsin Rep. Glenn Grothman Michigan Rep. Tim Walberg Florida Rep. Scott Franklin." [USA Today, 3/14/23]
March 15, 2023: Miller Claimed Able-Bodied Adults Without Dependents “Make SNAP A Lifestyle” When Justifying His Support For Stricter Restrictions On SNAP Eligibility. According to Rep. Max Miller’s Facebook, “When able-bodied adults without dependents make SNAP a lifestyle, they take from those who need it most - kids, single moms, the disabled, & elderly. There should be tighter restrictions for adults choosing not to seek work, school, or workforce training.’ [Facebook, Congressman Max Miller, 3/15/23]