Supreme Court Sides With Trump Administration to Pause Full SNAP Payments During Shutdown
The Supreme Court has stepped into the nation’s food aid fight, siding with the Trump administration in a high-stakes showdown over SNAP payments during the ongoing government shutdown.
Late Friday, the court granted an emergency request from the administration to temporarily block a lower-court order that required the government to fully fund the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) for November.
The ruling pauses a decision made earlier this week by U.S. District Judge John McConnell Jr., who had ordered the administration to pay out full benefits despite the shutdown. The judge said the government’s attempt to issue partial payments violated the law, but now that order is on hold.
The Trump administration argued it didn’t have the legal authority or available funds to meet the full $9 billion in payments, claiming that redirecting money from contingency funds could hurt other programs like school lunches and WIC.
With the Supreme Court’s intervention, millions of SNAP recipients may see smaller checks or delays, depending on how individual states handle the sudden change. Some states had already started processing full benefits after the earlier court ruling, and Friday’s reversal leaves agencies scrambling.
This legal tug-of-war adds new pressure to the already tense shutdown, as families relying on food assistance wait for answers. The high court’s move is only temporary — it buys time while the administration’s appeal continues, but the uncertainty could stretch on for weeks.
For now, one thing is clear: the country’s most vulnerable families are caught in the middle of a political and legal fight over basic access to food.
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