Ohio’s bold move to ban sugary drinks, soda-pop from food stamps sparks firestorm

Columbus, Ohio – Ohio Governor Mike DeWine has unleashed a controversial plan to slam the brakes on using food stamps to buy sugary drinks, igniting a fierce battle over health, freedom, and the future of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). In June, DeWine signed an Executive Order launching a high-powered working group to push for a federal waiver that would ban SNAP recipients from purchasing soda, energy drinks, and other sugar-laden beverages linked to skyrocketing rates of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and hypertension.

The working group, a who’s-who of Ohio’s health and retail heavyweights, includes big names like Matt Damschroder (Ohio Department of Job and Family Services), Maureen Corcoran (Ohio Department of Medicaid), and Bruce Vanderhoff, M.D. (Ohio Department of Health), alongside industry insiders from the Ohio Beverage Association and Ohio Grocers Association. They’re racing against the clock, with four high-stakes meetings scheduled at the Rhodes State Office Tower in Columbus on July 24, August 12, August 21, and September 11, 2025, to hammer out recommendations by September 28. The goal? Convince the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to greenlight Ohio’s plan by October 28, 2025, a move that could reshape SNAP rules and set a precedent nationwide.

This push aligns with the growing “Make America Healthy Again” (MAHA) movement, which champions aggressive public health reforms to tackle chronic diseases fueled by poor nutrition. Supporters argue that sugary drinks, packed with empty calories and zero nutritional value, are a public health crisis in a can, disproportionately harming low-income communities reliant on SNAP. “This is about saving lives,” said a MAHA advocate on X. “Why should taxpayer dollars subsidize diabetes in a bottle?” Proponents point to studies linking sugary beverages to a 30% higher risk of heart disease and a 20% spike in diabetes risk, arguing that restricting SNAP purchases is a bold step toward healthier families and lower healthcare costs…

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