Trump Agrees to Partially Fund SNAP
Trump Agrees to Partially Fund SNAP
The Trump administration on Monday agreed to move billions of emergency dollars to partially pay for food aid this month in response to a federal judge’s order, though some families may not receive benefits for weeks.
Officials will use $4.65 billion from USDA’s contingency fund to support roughly half of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program participants’ “current allotments” as the shutdown drags on, according to a new legal filing.
USDA said the plan will leave no money for any new SNAP applicants who applied for the program in November. The administration also refused to tap other funds — like one that holds unused tariff revenue dedicated to child nutrition programs — in order to match the full $8 billion that’s needed for SNAP benefits.
“Section 32 Child Nutrition Program funds are not a contingency fund for SNAP,” wrote Patrick Penn, USDA deputy undersecretary for Food and Nutrition Services in a statement to the court. “Using billions of dollars from Child Nutrition for SNAP would leave an unprecedented gap in Child Nutrition funding that Congress has never had to fill with annual appropriations, and USDA cannot predict what Congress will do under these circumstances.”
SNAP, which serves nearly 42 million Americans, ran out of federal funding for the first time in history last weekend, leaving states, food banks and nonprofit organizations scrambling to fill in the gap.
A federal judge in Rhode Island on Friday ordered officials to keep the nation’s largest anti-hunger program funded during the shutdown. Lawyers for the government previously argued in court that it lacked authority to tap its contingency fund for SNAP and that distributing partial benefits would result in a collapse of the administrative system.
Even with the administration’s reversal, USDA asserts in Monday’s filing that it could still take weeks, and in some states, months for families to receive the reduced benefits.
“For at least some States, USDA’s understanding is that the system changes States must implement to provide the reduced benefit amounts will take anywhere from a few weeks to up to several months,” Penn wrote.
Democracy Forward President and CEO Skye Perryman, a co-counsel on the Rhode Island lawsuit, said in a statement Monday that her organization is “considering all legal options to secure payment of full funds.”
USDA on Friday separately sent a $450 million cash infusion of Section 32 funds to support a nutrition program serving low-income women and children, just before the Nov. 1 funding cliff.
Trump Endorses Cuomo for NYC Mayor
Nov 4, 2025
2 min
House Dems, GOP Float Shutdown Compromise
Nov 4, 2025
1 min
Poll: Spanberger leads Earle-Sears in Virginia
Nov 4, 2025
3 min
BBC ‘Doctored’ Trump Jan. 6 Speech
Nov 4, 2025
3 min
Shapiro Blasts Tucker over Fuentes Interview
Nov 4, 2025
2 min
Top FDA Drug Regulator Resigns
Nov 4, 2025
2 min
CBS heavily edits Trump 60 Minutes interview
Nov 3, 2025
3 min
Trump Plans Mexico Mission Against Cartels
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
Mississippi Drug Bust: 2 Sheriffs, 12 Officers arrested
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
Judge Blocks National Guard Deployment to Portland
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
UK Train Stabber Identified as Anthony Williams
Nov 3, 2025
1 min
Mexican Anti-Cartel Mayor Assassinated
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
Rep. Massie Remarries After Wife’s Death
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
Illinois Bans ICE Arrests in Courthouses
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
Trump Helps Scott Adams Get Cancer Drug
Nov 3, 2025
1 min
Key Mayoral Races to Watch Tuesday
Nov 3, 2025
4 min
Chicago: Migrant Stabs 2 Teens Mid-Flight
Nov 3, 2025
1 min
WATCH: Brennan Confronted Over Hunter Laptop
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
Trump to Host Syrian President at White House
Nov 3, 2025
2 min
UK Police: Train Stabbing Not Terror Attack
Nov 2, 2025
1 min

