
What to Watch
Resolution of the shutdown: If Congress passes a spending bill and the USDA receives appropriation, SNAP benefits could resume normal operations.
Use of contingency funds: Whether the USDA will legally and operationally access its contingency funds to pay benefits despite lack of full appropriation remains pivotal.
State interventions: How states continue to respond, whether through emergency funds or supplemental programs, will influence how deep the crisis becomes.
Longer‐term policy changes: Beyond the immediate shutdown, there are potential shifts in SNAP policy such as eligibility changes, work-requirements expansions or benefits recalibration.
Food bank and nonprofit strain: As more households may rely on charitable food assistance, the capacity and sustainability of these networks will be tested.
What People Are Saying
Governors such as Gavin Newsom (California) called the looming disruption “immoral” and said the state would not “sit idly by while families go hungry.”
Some federal legislators are publicly blaming political opponents for the breakdown in funding and the program’s disruption.
Advocacy groups say this is “the greatest hunger catastrophe since the Great Depression” if benefits aren’t restored.
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								
								

