FEEDING THE CRISIS: SNAP UNDER SIEGE IN THE SHUTDOWN
Funding for SNAP, the federal Supplemental Food Assistance Program, is set to expire on November 1st due to the ongoing government shutdown that’s about to hit the one-month mark. A banner on the Department of Agriculture’s website blames Senate Democrats, immigrants and trans people for the crisis, but also says, “Bottom line, the well has run dry.” At the same time, the USDA said last week that it would not use contingency funds already allocated for such an emergency.
The bottom line is that 42 million people in 22 million households across the country - about 12% of the U.S. population - will lose some or all of their access to food over the weekend. Food banks and pantries as well as neighborhood mutual aid groups already struggling with the cutbacks of the shutdown and Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill are in deep crisis mode finding ways to keep their neighbors, towns and cities fed.
An additional 6.7 million women and children who rely on WIC, the Women Infants and Children nutrition program, could find that additional support cut off as well. And the possible shutdown of Head Start programs could drive tens of thousands of families further into crisis and despair as 140 of those programs that were relying on funding in November won’t get it.
This is straight out of the Project 2025 playbook, further highlighted by the fact that Donald Trump has gone out of his way to get ICE agents and other federal law enforcement paid during the shutdown.
