(By
David A. Super, MSN.com, 9 Nov 2025)
The Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, or SNAP, which helps 42 million Americans obtain enough food each
month, is currently not issuing benefits. Each day, more and more low-income
families pass the one-month mark since they last received assistance and risk
running out of food. This appalling state of affairs in one of the world’s
richest countries is made all the worse because it is completely unnecessary. Congress has given the Trump
administration all the funds it needs to provide full SNAP benefits, and on Thursday, a
judge ordered the administration to fully fund this month’s benefits. But the
administration continues to drag its feet.
SNAP is the nation’s largest food
assistance program. As I wrote last week, two fifths of SNAP households include
at least one employed member, and almost all the remaining households are
either elderly, disabled or relying on SNAP during brief periods while looking for
work. Though states operate the program,
the Department of Agriculture, or the USDA, funds its benefits. And although
the Food and Nutrition Act of 2008 requires the USDA to provide food assistance to
all eligible families that apply, Congress traditionally has included
specific funding for SNAP in its annual appropriations bills. October benefits were
funded by last fiscal year’s appropriations act, but when that expired at the end of
September and the government shutdown began, the question arose what
would happen to SNAP.
The answer seemed clear: Congress
set aside a $6 billion contingency reserve to pay SNAP benefits in just this
type of situation, and also gave the USDA authority to transfer funds from one food
assistance program to another as needed to prevent interruptions in benefits.
In October, the Trump administration exercised this same transfer authority to
move money from child nutrition programs to keep WIC running.
The administration, however,
refused to tap either source of funds to continue SNAP in November. The USDA even
took down a plan it had posted a few weeks earlier promising to pay benefits
from the contingency fund. Instead, the department’s website has added a
deeply partisan post blaming congressional Democrats for shutting down SNAP.
This sequence, without a coherent rationale for refraining from spending the
funds, suggests that the administration’s decision was motivated not by
legal or operational concerns, but rather by a desire to further pressure
congressional Democrats in the current shutdown fight.
The USDA promptly faced several
lawsuits, one from a group of states, one from a group of cities and nonprofits
worried about how they could feed millions of people whose food aid suddenly
stopped and one from SNAP recipients themselves. Two judges separately
found the USDA’s withholding benefit unlawful, with a federal judge in
Rhode Island ordering the department to allow states to provide at least partial
SNAP benefits right away.
Rather than promptly complying,
the USDA began foot-dragging. It told the court it had already spent some of
the contingency fund on other things but would devote what was left to
paying SNAP benefits. It then told states to recalculate every household’s SNAP
benefits under a formula that would cut far more than was needed to fit within
even what the USDA said was left in the contingency fund. After plaintiffs
pointed out that it was not complying with the court’s order, the USDA told
states to start over and recalculate everyone’s benefits under a new, modestly
less parsimonious formula. This formula
would still cut every family by more than one-third and would leave millions
with no food assistance at all. And the repeated changes in direction slowed
down getting SNAP to people even more.
On Thursday, Judge John McConnell
expressed frustration with the USDA’s continued delays and found no
legal reason why the department could not transfer excess child nutrition
funds, as it already had to fund WIC. He therefore ordered the USDA to allow states
to deliver full SNAP benefits by Friday. The USDA has sent states a vague
statement that it is “working towards implementing” the court’s order
while the administration filed an emergency appeal with the court of appeals.
The department did not, however, explicitly rescind its previous guidance
telling states to recalculate and cut households’ benefits. Some states have read
the memo as authorizing them to issue full benefits, but other states are
seeking further clarification, further extending the waits of their low-income
families. SNAP may be entering a period of chaos, with a supposedly “uniform national”
program staying open or shutting down based on the empathy and risk tolerance
of individual state governors.
And despite the USDA’s statement,
the administration has not withdrawn its appeal. It claims that it is
refusing to transfer the needed funds to SNAP out of concern that Congress might, for
the first time in almost 80 years, decide to defund the child nutrition
programs — something nobody in either party is proposing to do. Instead, it asked
both the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court to delay Judge McConnell’s
order.Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson postponed that order’s effective date long
enough for the Court of Appeals to evaluate the Government’s appeal.
One can only conclude from all
this foot-dragging without any legal justification that the Trump administration is
seeking to maximize the suffering of low-income Americans to gain political
leverage on Democratic lawmakers. The USDA’s warning last week that stores
cannot offer discounts to households that have lost their SNAP benefits seems to
support that conclusion.
Last weekend, President Donald
Trump posted on Truth Social that it would be his “honor” to provide SNAP benefits
if a court told the administration where to find the money. Judge McConnell has
done just that. This shameful episode must end.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/why-trump-is-holding-back-on-helping-people-who-can-t-buy-food/ar-AA1Q5Hko?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=DCTS&cvid=6910cda36e944ce9bf4e9685e2377b0c&ei=12
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