The Trump administration ordered states to claw back full SNAP benefits already issued to nearly 42 million low-income Americans. The order came yesterday, just hours after the Supreme Court temporarily blocked full program funding. States that don’t comply risk losing federal administrative money.
The directive followed an emergency stay from Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson late Friday, calling states full November payments unauthorized. Multiple states, including Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New York, and New Jersey, had already started distributing the benefits after a lower court ordered full payments. Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers said he wouldn’t comply.
SNAP payments halted earlier this month for the first time in the programs 61-year history because of the 40-day government shutdown. The administration is still withholding about $4 billion in funding while the lawsuits keep stacking up.
Now USDA says states can only issue partial payments reflecting a 35% cut in maximum allotments. That means tens of millions of Americans will see smaller grocery budgets right as food prices rise and food pantries run out of capacity.
If the goal was to make hunger a policy tool, mission accomplished.