Rural Kentucky family at bare Thanksgiving table amid SNAP benefit cuts from government shutdown, highlighting policy impacts.
Rural Kentucky family at bare Thanksgiving table amid SNAP benefit cuts from government shutdown, highlighting policy impacts.
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Government shutdown disrupts SNAP benefits ahead of Thanksgiving

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The recent U.S. government shutdown has left many families struggling with reduced SNAP food benefits just before Thanksgiving, exacerbating holiday hardships amid inflation and job losses. In Kentucky's Martin County, where 91 percent of voters backed Donald Trump in 2024, residents express growing disillusionment with his policies. Political figures like Senator Patty Murray have blamed Trump, sparking online critiques.

The longest government shutdown in U.S. history, which ended in November 2025, severely disrupted the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), affecting millions as Thanksgiving approached. In Martin County, Kentucky, where 23 percent of residents—or about 1,300 households—rely on SNAP, families received partial benefits on November 6, according to the Kentucky Center for Economic Policy. Jason Bailey, the center's director, described Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear's $5 million allocation to food banks as a mere "stopgap," noting the state's monthly SNAP funding is around $105 million. Bailey warned that Trump's "One Big, Beautiful Bill," passed earlier, will expand work requirements starting early 2026, potentially jeopardizing benefits for 114,000 Kentuckians, including 50,000 aged 54 to 65 and caregivers of children over 14. This could create a $188 million annual shortfall for the state.

Local impacts were stark. At Warfield Market, sales dropped from $15,000 to $7,000 per day during the shutdown, said assistant manager Ron Jones. Thomas Howell, a 25-year-old earning $8 an hour, relies on $110 monthly in SNAP and expressed disappointment: "I’m truly disappointed in the minimal effort Trump’s been giving us poor people." Howell, who voted for Trump in 2020 and 2024, now sees empty promises, especially after the shutdown's blame-shifting. Trump's net approval in Kentucky stands at 0.2 percent, per recent projections.

Nationally, similar struggles emerged. In Massachusetts, Steve Posey and his wife turned to Instacart gigs amid rising costs, relying on food pantries for Thanksgiving turkey. New York City's Rosetta Savannah received half her usual SNAP and opted for chicken over turkey. In Pennsylvania, Bonnie Green, whose federal job was cut by the Department of Government Efficiency, halved her income and simplified her holiday menu to chicken soup.

Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) posted a video on November 24 blaming Trump for fighting to the Supreme Court to deny SNAP benefits and enacting the largest cuts in history, calling it "fundamentally immoral." Filmmaker Justine Bateman critiqued the video's production, noting the actress seemed "under-rehearsed" and the setting distracting, resembling a bathroom stall.

Hvad folk siger

X discussions feature partisan divides on SNAP disruptions from the government shutdown before Thanksgiving. Democrats like Sen. Patty Murray blame Trump and GOP cuts for higher costs and benefit denials. Conservatives counter that Democrats prolonged the shutdown, emphasize SNAP fraud, and cite falling Thanksgiving meal prices. Kentucky media highlights heavy local SNAP reliance exposed by the shutdown.

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Food banks warn of crisis as judges order SNAP funded but delays loom

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Millions of Americans faced uncertainty on November 1 as the government shutdown collided with court orders directing the administration to keep SNAP running. Food bank leaders say they cannot substitute for the federal program, and payment delays are still likely as states work to reload benefits.

With the U.S. government shutdown stretching toward a fifth week, the Agriculture Department says it cannot fund November Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, putting roughly 42 million people at risk of a lapse starting Nov. 1. More than two dozen states sued to compel the Trump administration to use contingency reserves, while governors and agencies roll out emergency measures from food-bank support to state-funded bridge payments.

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A Tucson-based investigative journalist who receives SNAP said Arizona warned in late October 2025 that November benefits could be delayed during a federal government shutdown tied to a dispute over expiring Affordable Care Act subsidies. Court orders and rapid legal appeals contributed to a shifting national patchwork of partial, delayed or restored payments, while food pantries and mutual-aid groups reported increased demand.

The U.S. government shutdown reached its 15th day on October 15, 2025, as Democrats and Republicans remained deadlocked over federal funding. The Trump administration reshuffled Pentagon funds to ensure active-duty troops receive paychecks, easing one pressure point, while a federal judge temporarily halted layoffs affecting thousands of civilian employees. Negotiations stalled in the Senate, with Democrats demanding extensions for expiring health care subsidies.

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President Donald Trump continued to travel during a federal shutdown that began on October 1, 2025, taking a late‑October swing through Malaysia, Japan and South Korea and spending Halloween weekend at Mar‑a‑Lago, even as millions of Americans faced missed paychecks and threatened food assistance.

With the federal government shut down since October 1, the Defense Department has accepted a $130 million private donation to help cover military pay — an unprecedented move that President Donald Trump touted while legal and ethical questions mounted and pressure grew over lapsed nutrition benefits.

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The Trump administration announced substantial layoffs of federal employees on October 10, 2025, as the government shutdown entered its tenth day. Court filings indicate around 4,200 workers across seven agencies are receiving reduction-in-force notices. The move has heightened tensions in Congress, with both parties blaming each other for the impasse over funding and health care subsidies.

 

 

 

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