On May 18, 2018, the bill failed in the House of Representatives by a vote of 198–213. All Democrats and 30 Republicans voted against the measure. Republican opposition came largely from members of the conservative
Freedom Caucus who believed that some of the bill's provisions would liberalize immigration policy. One of the caucus members, Congressman
Jim Jordan, said, "My main focus was making sure we do immigration policy right." Democratic opposition was largely due to the proposed changes to the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) that would impose work requirements for recipients. In the runup to introduction in Congress, the
American Soybean Association had opposed any cuts versus the 2014 version. On September 30, some provisions of the 2014 farm bill expired without a replacement while others were funded through end of calendar year 2018. Sticking points were said to be SNAP work requirements, commodity and energy policy, funding, and cotton and other crop subsidies. In late November, a compromise had been reached, removing SNAP work requirements, and the legislation was voted on and passed by the end of the year. ==Provisions==