Trump Administration Says Food Aid Will Be Partially Funded

Trump Administration Says Food Aid Will Be Partially Funded

Trump Administration Says Food Aid Will Be Partially Funded

A shopper carries a basket inside a grocery store in the Bronx borough of New York, US, on Friday, Oct. 24, 2025. The political firestorm over the looming cutoff in food-aid funding intensified Thursday as lawmakers from both parties sounded alarms and some states warned retailers of its consequences.
A shopper carries a basket inside a grocery store in the Bronx borough of New York, US, on Friday, Oct. 24, 2025. The political firestorm over the looming cutoff in food-aid funding intensified Thursday as lawmakers from both parties sounded alarms and some states warned retailers of its consequences.

The Trump administration told a federal judge on Monday that it will comply with a court order to fund US food aid benefits for November during the government shutdown, but only at 50% of the amount that eligible households normally receive.

A US Department of Agriculture official also warned the court that it could take some states “anywhere from a few weeks to up to several months” to recalculate household benefit amounts and implement the partial payment.

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The Justice Department said in its latest court filing that officials are working “diligently” to comply with a ruling last week from a judge in Rhode Island requiring officials to at least partially fund Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, benefits for November.

WATCH: The Trump administration told a federal judge on Monday it will partially fund the US food aid program for November.Source: Bloomberg
WATCH: The Trump administration told a federal judge on Monday it will partially fund the US food aid program for November.Source: Bloomberg

But the document also includes a notice that while the Agriculture Department intends to “deplete” a SNAP contingency fund per the order, officials had decided that they would not tap into other federal sources to fully fund benefits this month.

The latest update from the administration follows back-to-back rulings from federal judges in Boston and Rhode Island who found that officials likely violated US law in suspending SNAP during the government shutdown that began on Oct. 1.

Skye Perryman, president of Democracy Forward, a left-leaning legal advocacy group representing the nonprofits and city governments that sued in Rhode Island, said in a statement that they are “reviewing the administration’s submission to the court and considering all legal options to secure payment of full funds.”

“It shouldn’t take a court order to force our president to provide essential nutrition that Congress has made clear needs to be provided,” Perryman said. “For now, we are pleased to have forced the administration to release money it had been withholding from 42 million people in America who rely on their benefits.”

Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins said in an online post that the partial funding plan was one of several “STOPGAP measures that create unnecessary chaos in State systems and distribution of benefits.” Trump “is doing everything he can to help our most vulnerable mothers and babies while Radical Left Democrats continue to obstruct,” Rollins wrote.

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