VOTE 2026

Westchester primary results

News12 New York
N12 Originals
Numbers & Links
Local
Crime
Weather
Politics
Vote 2026: Westchester
AP25311675081235

States face uncertainty as Trump administration tries to reverse SNAP food payments

A federal appeals court in Boston left the full benefits order in place on Sunday, though the Supreme Court order ensures the government won’t have to pay out for at least 48 hours.

Associated Press

Nov 10, 2025, 7:30 AM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

States administering a federal food aid program serving about 42 million Americans faced uncertainty Monday over whether they can — and should — provide full monthly benefits during an ongoing legal battle involving the U.S. government shutdown.

President Donald Trump’s administration over the weekend demanded that states “undo” full benefits that were paid under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program during a one-day window between when a federal judge ordered full funding and a Supreme Court justice put a temporary pause on that order.

A federal appeals court in Boston left the full benefits order in place on Sunday, though the Supreme Court order ensures the government won’t have to pay out for at least 48 hours. The Trump administration is also expected to ask the justices to step in again, and Congress is considering whether to fund SNAP as part of a proposal to end the government shutdown.

Some states are warning of “catastrophic operational disruptions” if the Trump administration does not reimburse them for those SNAP benefits they already authorized. Meanwhile, other states are providing partial monthly SNAP benefits with federal money or using their own funds to load electronic benefit cards for SNAP recipients.

Millions receive aid while others wait

Trump's administration initially said SNAP benefits would not be available in November because of the government shutdown. After some states and nonprofit groups sued, two judges each ruled the administration could not skip November’s benefits entirely.

The administration then said it would use an emergency reserve fund to provide 65% of the maximum monthly benefit. On Thursday, U.S. District Judge John J. McConnell said that wasn't good enough, and ordered full funding for SNAP benefits by Friday.

Some states acted quickly to direct their EBT vendors to disburse full monthly benefits to SNAP recipients. Millions of people in those states received funds to buy groceries before Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson put McConnell's order on hold Friday night, pending further deliberation by an appeals court.

Millions more people still have not received SNAP payments for November, because their states were waiting on further guidance from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which administers SNAP.

Trump's administration has argued that the judicial order to provide full benefits violates the Constitution by infringing on the spending power of the legislative and executive branches.

States are fighting attempt to freeze SNAP benefits

On Sunday, the Trump administration said states had moved too quickly and erroneously released full SNAP benefits after last week’s rulings.

"States must immediately undo any steps taken to issue full SNAP benefits for November 2025,” Patrick Penn, deputy undersecretary of Agriculture, wrote to state SNAP directors. He warned that states could face penalties if they did not comply.

Wisconsin, which was among the first to load full benefits after McConnell’s order, had its federal reimbursement frozen. As a result, the state’s SNAP account could be depleted as soon Monday, leaving no money to reimburse stores that sell food to SNAP recipients, according to a court filing submitted by those that had sued.

Some Democratic governors vowed to challenge any federal attempt to claw back money.

In Connecticut, Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont said “those who received their benefits should not worry about losing them.”

“No, Connecticut does not need to take back SNAP benefits already sent to the 360,000 people who depend on them for food and who should have never been caught in the middle of this political fight,” Lamont said. “We have their back.”

More Stories

Top Stories

00:35
Putnam Road Rage Arrest

Man charged after alleged gun threat during road rage incident in Southeast

02:03
AG F PickOfTheWeek

Today is the pick of the week in the Hudson Valley ahead of more rounds of rain

00:54
Screenshot 2026-06-24 080339

Drone drops smuggle drugs and contraband into Hudson Valley prisons

Vote 2026

Vote 2026: Westchester primary results

00:28
MAP- MAP - GRAND LARCENY ARREST - BRIARCLIFFE MANOR - BRIARCLIFF MANOR (2)

2 workers accused of stealing more than $47,000 from disabled residents

AP19098788019660

Trump expected to attend World Cup final at MetLife and present trophy

01:42
IMG 9367

Are your hydrangeas failing to bloom? Here's how to select the PERFECT hydrangea for your garden

02:20
WC 430 TUES_Indian Point Closure_ajc_2026-06-23-16-41-50

School leaders warn of $25 million deficit tied to Indian Point shutdown

01:23
WC PRIMARY_Feiner Victory_ajc_2026-06-23-22-13-00

Paul Feiner declares victory in primary race for Greenburgh town supervisor

01:40
LIWhatscooking624_2026-06-24-05-32-04

What's Cooking: Italian Sushi

00:28
6242026PAWLINGPUBLICLEWDNESS_2026-06-24-05-43-08

Man charged after public lewdness report in supermarket parking lot in Patterson

02:08
blaise widows bill

Orange County woman behind insurance ‘widow’s penalty’ bill hopes to change New York law

00:40
6232026VETERANABUSEARREST_2026-06-23-06-00-09

Aide accused of abusing veteran at state-run home now facing felony charge

Vote 2026

Who won? New York primary election results from across the region

00:30
6232026WC12yomker_2026-06-23-12-17-37

Yonkers suspect pleads guilty to manslaughter in Westchester fatal shooting

00:29
6232026DWIKIDSINCARTACONIC_2026-06-23-07-12-52

Bronx man accused of driving drunk with kids in his car in Putnam County

03:21
RTWCHVALLTTTVeteranAbuseFoloTRosenblum430pm_2026-06-22-16-48-08

Turn To Tara investigation into alleged abuse at NY veterans home sparks federal action

02:00
6222026WC12teacher_2026-06-22-12-16-03

Former New Rochelle teacher ruled not fit to stand trial and sent to psychiatric center

00:23
Putnam Bike Incident

Cyclist critically injured after crash with pickup truck in Philipstown

00:57
WC 9P MON_Housing Workshop_ajc_2026-06-22-21-11-44

New Rochelle hosts workshop on new affordable housing development

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices