Trump balking on paying full SNAP benefits in November if shutdown persists

By Jen Krausz on
 November 10, 2025

The Trump administration said on Monday that it would continue to seek a block of an order to pay full SNAP benefits for November in the midst of a federal government shutdown.

A Rhode Island court issued the order last week after President Donald Trump agreed to pay partial benefits to SNAP recipients using existing funding, but said that full benefits would not be paid because the funding was not yet approved by Congress.

A Boston appeals court twice ruled that it would not stay the lower court ruling while the Supreme Court considered the case.

Besides the issue of whether a court can rule that payments be made in the absence of funding by Congress, the Trump administration also argued that the ruling violated a SCOTUS decision about lower courts being able to issue nationwide injunctions.

The battle continues

The Supreme Court temporarily stayed the order while the White House decided whether to continue to seek a block on the lower court decision.

A supplemental brief is being filed today, and plaintiffs were ordered to respond by Tuesday morning.

Over the weekend, the Trump administration also sent a memo to states that unilaterally said they would pay the full SNAP benefit amount to recipients, telling them they had to "undo" the payments.

A judge in Massachusetts quickly blocked that memo, however.

Much ado about nothing

To me, it seems like a lot of to-do over nothing. When the shutdown ends, which it looks like will happen this week, full benefits will be paid.

It seems like a lot of court activity over a few days of delay, and I'm not sure why that's a hill Trump wants to die on.

The Senate finally advanced a spending bill on Sunday after working through the weekend, and the terms seem pretty favorable to Republicans, which means it will likely pass in the House as well.

The bill funds the government through January, but funds SNAP benefits through most of 2026.

It also guarantees a vote on extending ACA subsidies for an additional year, but did not approve the subsidies yet.

The end of the shutdown also seems likely to alleviate shortages at food banks and other issues stemming from a lack of payments to lower-income individuals.

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