Illustration of President Trump amid government shutdown turmoil, featuring elements of SNAP court orders, filibuster debate, Asia trade easing, and ACA enrollment chaos.
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Shutdown tests Trump as courts force SNAP payments and filibuster fight flares; Asia trip touts trade thaw

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With a weeks-long government shutdown stretching into November, the White House faces court orders to keep SNAP benefits flowing and resistance to President Donald Trump’s call to end the Senate filibuster, even as his Asia tour produced a tentative easing of U.S.–China trade tensions. Open enrollment for Affordable Care Act coverage began Nov. 1 amid the turmoil.

Federal judges in Massachusetts and Rhode Island ordered the administration to keep Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits going during the shutdown, directing the use of contingency reserves while legal challenges proceed. The rulings affect more than 40 million beneficiaries and aim to avert an abrupt cutoff as of Nov. 1, though officials warn payments could still be uneven while agencies retool systems under court supervision. (apnews.com)

Before the rulings, the U.S. Department of Agriculture had argued the reserves were intended for natural disasters and might be insufficient for a full month of benefits. Afterward, Trump said he would comply if given legal clarity, and advisers signaled the White House was exploring lawful mechanisms to maintain aid. NPR’s Ron Elving noted that two judges viewed the situation as an emergency, underscoring the political stakes of the shutdown. (apnews.com)

At the same time, the administration has prioritized military pay, redirecting roughly $8 billion in research-and-development funds to meet payroll and, unusually, accepting an anonymous $130 million private donation that covers only a sliver of total costs. These steps drew scrutiny from budget experts and lawmakers. (reuters.com)

Optics have compounded the pressure. On Oct. 31, Trump unveiled a marble-and-gold renovation of the White House’s Lincoln Bathroom, drawing criticism over timing and cost transparency. He also attended a “Great Gatsby”-themed Halloween party at Mar-a-Lago the same night, which critics said jarred with families’ anxieties about food assistance. (washingtonpost.com)

Seeking leverage to end the stalemate, Trump urged Senate Republicans to scrap the 60‑vote legislative filibuster, invoking the “nuclear option.” GOP leaders quickly rejected the idea, and Majority Leader John Thune reaffirmed his long‑stated defense of the rule as a protection for minority-party rights—a stance many Republicans say prevents sweeping moves such as Supreme Court expansion or D.C. statehood if they were to lose their majority. (reuters.com)

Abroad, Trump touted progress on his Asia tour. In Busan, he and China’s Xi Jinping agreed to trim some U.S. tariffs and de-escalate rhetoric, paired with Chinese pledges on rare‑earth exports and soybean purchases—a fragile truce, analysts cautioned. Days earlier, Trump witnessed Thailand and Cambodia sign an expanded cease-fire after a deadly border flare‑up, a moment regional officials cast as a step toward stability. Still, as Elving observed, developments overseas were overshadowed by the shutdown at home. (reuters.com)

Meanwhile, Affordable Care Act marketplace open enrollment for 2026 coverage began Nov. 1 in most states and runs through Jan. 15, with some state-based exchanges using different deadlines. Consumers who enroll by Dec. 15 can generally start coverage Jan. 1. (healthcare.gov)

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Families line up at a food bank for aid amid the 35-day U.S. government shutdown, with volunteers providing support as SNAP benefits are delayed.
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U.S. shutdown reaches day 35; courts force partial SNAP payments as private aid steps in

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The federal government shutdown that began Oct. 1 has entered its 35th day, delaying food assistance for roughly 42 million people as court orders push the administration to issue partial November SNAP benefits from limited USDA reserves. Political stalemate over Affordable Care Act subsidies persists while tech nonprofits and local charities try to fill the gap.

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.

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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.

Two federal judges on Friday directed the Trump administration to tap emergency funds to keep SNAP benefits flowing to roughly 42 million people as the U.S. government shutdown entered its 31st day. One judge issued a temporary restraining order calling for immediate action; another gave the administration until Monday to decide whether to send at least partial payments.

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The U.S. Senate voted 60-40 to approve a stopgap funding bill paired with three full-year appropriations, moving to reopen the federal government after a 41-day shutdown. The package funds most operations through January 30, 2026, restores back pay and jobs for federal workers affected by reduction-in-force actions, and fully funds agriculture and legislative-branch operations as well as military construction and veterans’ programs through September 2026. It omits an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, a key Democratic demand, and adds a new provision letting senators sue over secret seizures of their phone data.

President Donald Trump announced on October 11, 2025, that he has directed Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth to use available funds to pay active-duty troops on October 15, despite the ongoing government shutdown. The move comes as service members face the risk of missing their first full paychecks amid a funding stalemate between Republicans and Democrats. Trump blamed Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Democrats for the impasse.

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President Donald Trump on Saturday urged Senate Republicans to scrap the Affordable Care Act and send federal dollars that now support the law directly to Americans, intensifying a shutdown fight centered on expiring ACA subsidies during what has become the longest U.S. government shutdown on record.

 

 

 

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