Politics & Government
NY Sues Trump Administration Over Halt To SNAP Benefits
"Millions of Americans are about to go hungry."

NEW YORK β New York Attorney General Letitia James and 24 other state leaders, as well as the District of Columbia, announced on Tuesday that they are suing the U.S. Department of Agriculture for unlawfully suspending Supplemental Nutrition Program, or SNAP, benefits during the ongoing federal government shutdown.
Attorney General James and the coalition argue that the administrationβs refusal to issue November SNAP payments to more than 40 million Americans β including nearly 3 million New Yorkers β violates federal law and could leave countless families hungry.
The coalition emphasized that the administrationβs pause is unlawful because USDA is legally required to continue providing benefits as long as it has funding, and the agency has access to billions of dollars in contingency funds that Congress specifically appropriated to keep benefits flowing during funding lapses. The coalition is asking the court to intervene immediately and ensure USDA uses its existing contingency funds to maintain life-saving food assistance benefits through the shutdown.
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"Millions of Americans are about to go hungry because the federal government has chosen to withhold food assistance it is legally obligated to provide," said James and the coalition. "SNAP is one of our nationβs most effective tools to fight hunger, and the USDA has the money to keep it running. There is no excuse for this administration to abandon families who rely on SNAP, or food stamps, as a lifeline. The federal government must do its job to protect families."
SNAP is the nationβs largest anti-hunger program, providing critical assistance to low-income households to help them buy groceries and put food on the table. Nationwide, more than 42 million Americans depend on SNAP to feed themselves and their families, officials said.
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Children and seniors make up nearly 60 percent of all SNAP recipients, and well over a million veterans receive SNAP benefits each year, officials added.
In New York alone, SNAP serves nearly 3 million people, including nearly 1 million children and more than 600,000 older adults. Approximately seven percent of New York SNAP recipients are disabled.
This past year, New Yorkers received approximately $650 million in SNAP benefits each month, James said.
Now, for the first time in SNAPβs 60-year history, the federal government is refusing to issue monthly food assistance payments due to a lapse in appropriations. Despite initially guaranteeing it would use contingency funding to maintain SNAP benefits, on October 10, USDA instructed states to "hold" their payments for November benefits.
Two weeks later, USDA formally ordered all states to suspend benefits effective November 1. This directive will halt food assistance for 42 million Americans β people who now risk going hungry due to this suspension, James and the coalition said.
Attorney General James and the coalition argued that the pause was "avoidable and unnecessary."
The USDA has access to at least $6 billion in contingency funds appropriated by Congress for exactly this purpose, they said. "The coalition warns that this decision threatens catastrophic consequences for millions of families and will exacerbate food insecurity nationwide," they said.
On Friday, James and 22 other attorneys general wrote a letter to USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins, seeking clarification on the administrationβs plan to protect food assistance through the shutdown, and highlighting the agencyβs contingency funds as a possible solution. The attorneys general said they have not received a response.
The coalition asserted that "this cruel and unlawful decision is a clear violation" of the Food and Nutrition Act, which requires that "assistance under this program shall be furnished to all eligible households," and the Administrative Procedure Act, "because the action is arbitrary and capricious."
AG James and the coalition asked the court to intervene immediately to ensure vulnerable families do not lose access to food assistance on November 1. They are seeking a temporary restraining order directing USDA to put available contingency funds toward November SNAP benefits for all plaintiff states.
Joining James in filing this lawsuit are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia, as well as the governors of Kansas, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania.
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