The agreement to use contingency funds to pay for food stamp benefits came after a judge said Trump administration could not cease paying for the benefits.

Despite the ruling, it seems likely SNAP benefits will still be delayed.

The Trump administration said Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits would cease on Nov. 1.

The Justice Department argued that the food stamp program, which feeds more than 40 million Americans, effectively did not exist anymore due to the shutdown.

A federal judge said the plan to suspend food aid to millions of Americans during the ongoing US government shutdown is likely unlawful.

Judge Talwani gave the Trump administration until Nov. 3 to decide if it will pay full or partial benefits. Another judge said SNAP is an entitlement.

U.S. judge orders Trump administration to continue SNAP benefits during shutdown, ruling the suspension unlawful amid public outcry.

42 million people won't be receiving November's allotment of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits because of the shutdown.

SNAP food benefits could restart as early as Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Sunday.

The administration has until Monday to decide how it's going to fund the country's biggest food aid program for November amid the ongoing shutdown.

President Donald Trump’s administration faces deadlines on Monday to tell two federal judges whether it will comply with court orders that it continue to fund SNAP, the nation’s…

One in eight Americans are dependent on a food assistance program called Snap, which has gone unfunded since Saturday.

President Donald Trump has until noon Monday to respond to a federal judge who ruled last week that food benefits must be reinstated.

The agreement to use contingency funds to pay for food stamp benefits came after a judge said Trump administration could not cease paying for the benefits.

Contingency funds will keep benefits going for nearly 42 million people in the food assistance program, Trump says

The administration said it could cover “50% of eligible households current allotments” through November with the $4.65 billion in a contingency fund.

In response to a court order, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said it would tap its contingency fund.

The country's flagship food aid scheme serves one in eight Americans each month.

In the latest update, the Trump administration agreed to release partial SNAP payments, but they will be half of the normal amounts.

The government says an emergency fund it will use has $4.65 billion — enough to cover about half the normal benefits.

When will SNAP benefits arrive for November and other things to know