Prior presidential administrations have continued paying SNAP benefits during past shutdowns of the U.S. government.

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…

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.

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.

Prior presidential administrations have continued paying SNAP benefits during past shutdowns of the U.S. government.

Benefits will be reduced by only 35% instead of 50% in the latest chaos emanating from the government shutdown.

The program serves about 1 in 8 Americans and is a major piece of the nation’s social safety net.

The Trump administration recently said it would not pay any SNAP benefits, but then offered partial funding of the food stamp program after a judge's ruling.

The federal judge ruled that Trump was choosing to withhold federal food aid due to "political reasons".

The Trump administration has one day to fully distribute Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits for November, a federal judge ruled on Thursday.

The Trump administration has one day to fully distribute Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits for November, a federal judge ruled on Thursday.

The Trump administration asked a federal appeals court for an emergency block on a judge’s order that it pay 42 million Americans full SNAP benefits for November by Friday.