If passed by the House of Representatives on Wednesday, a bill could end the government shutdown and at the same time fully restore funding for the food assistance program.

The question of whether the Trump administration can be compelled to pay 42 million Americans full food stamp benefits is set to return to the Supreme Court.

The ruling will have no immediate impact because of a U.S. Supreme Court decision on Friday.

It’s up to the US Supreme Court and Congress to decide when full payments will resume under the SNAP food aid program that helps 1 in 8 Americans buy groceries as the financial…

The decision comes amid signals that the government shutdown could soon end and food aid payments resume.

The ruling means Americans on food stamps likely will not see benefits until the government funding bill is approved by the House and President Donald Trump, who is expected to…

The Trump administration has argued that the legal battle over SNAP benefits will be made moot when Congress passes a bill to end the government shutdown.

Decision follows Senate vote to reopen government, but legal saga brought uncertainty to millions who need food aid.

The government shutdown appears to be coming to an end. But the Supreme Court has left the Trump administration's freeze on food benefits in place through Thursday.

Supreme Court extends SNAP payment freeze as Senate works to end government shutdown, impacting millions of food aid recipients.

If passed by the House of Representatives on Wednesday, a bill could end the government shutdown and at the same time fully restore funding for the food assistance program.

Once signed by President Donald Trump, the spending bill will reopen the government after 43 days.

The government continues to reopen two days after the longest shutdown in history, with states reviving SNAP and airlines getting planes in place.