An EBT sign is displayed on the window of a grocery store on Oct. 30, 2025 in the Flatbush neighborhood of the Brooklyn borough in New York City.
Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images
The Trump administration asked a federal appeals court to issue an emergency block on a judge’s order that it pay 42 million Americans their full SNAP benefits for November by Friday.
The administration requested that the 1st Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals allow it to pay 65 percent of the food stamp benefits this month from a contingency fund, as the administration had proposed to the judge earlier this week.
The request came a day after Judge Jack McConnell issued an order in U.S. District Court in Rhode Island rejecting the partial payment option.
McConnell ordered the administration to use so-called Section 32 funds to help fully fund the SNAP benefits, along with the $4.65 billion it already planned to use from the contingency fund appropriated by Congress. The administration earlier had rejected the idea of using Section 32 funds for that purpose.
The appeals court on Friday morning told plaintiffs in the case to respond to the administration’s motion for an emergency stay of McConnell’s order by noon, ET.
The administration last week said it planned to completely cease payments to recipients of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program in November because there was no current funding appropriated by Congress for it.
The U.S. government has been shut down since Oct. 1 because Congress has been unable to agree on a bill that would temporarily fund federal programs, including SNAP.
Prior administrations have continued paying SNAP benefits during other shutdowns.
A group of cities, charitable and faith-based non-profit groups, unions, and business organizations sued the Trump administration, asking McConnell to order officials to fully SNAP benefits.
On Oct. 31, McConnell ordered the administration to pay at least partial benefits from the contingency fund as soon as possible, and to investigate whether other funds could be used to help pay for the full benefits.
The administration on Monday told McConnell it would pay 50% of SNAP benefits for November by using the contingency money, but said it would not use other funds. On Wednesday, the administration told the judge that a review of the contingency funds available meant that 65% of the benefits could be paid.
Plaintiffs in the case said that was not acceptable and asked McConnell to order that full benefits be paid.
McConnell agreed, telling administration lawyers at a hearing on Thursday, “People have gone without for too long.”
“The evidence shows that people will go hungry, food pantries will be overburdened, and needless suffering will occur” if SNAP is not fully funded, the judge said.
“While the President of the United States professes a commitment to helping those it serves, the government’s actions tell a different story,” McConnell wrote in a subsequent written order.
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