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Federal judge orders Trump administration to pay SNAP benefits out of contingency fund

admin - Latest News - October 31, 2025
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A Rhode Island federal judge on Friday ordered the U.S.



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October 14, 2025
Oct. 14, 2025, 3:53 PM EDT / Updated Oct. 14, 2025, 4:19 PM EDTBy Sahil Kapur and Scott WongWASHINGTON — At the two-week mark, Republicans and Democrats are bracing for a long government shutdown, with both parties seeing more upside in persisting with their conflicting demands.As a result, neither side is willing to give an inch in the standoff, now the fifth-longest shutdown in the country’s history. Republicans say their message is simple: Senate Democrats should vote for the short-term funding bill to reopen the government that passed the House last month and pursue their policy demands separately. They accuse Democrats of holding the government “hostage” to their goals.But Democrats are eager to continue a national debate they’ve forced about a looming health care cliff, by demanding any funding bill be tied to addressing expiring Obamacare subsidies. The health care money is popular, even among self-described MAGA supporters, and has divided Republicans — although they are unified in saying it must be dealt with separately, outside the context of a government funding bill.“It feels like both parties are digging their trenches and preparing for a long conflict,” said Ian Russell, a former national political director for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. “This is Washington, so things can obviously change very quickly. But you get the sense from leadership suites on both sides that both parties feel like they’re either maximizing their strengths or certainly not exposing themselves to serious vulnerabilities.”The Senate is scheduled to vote Tuesday for the eighth time on the GOP’s short-term funding bill, which requires 60 votes to advance. Republicans need at least five more Democrats to break a filibuster and have made no progress since the shutdown began.Russell said Democrats see the Obamacare funding as a way to “reset the narrative” and “unite” a party that has clashed about the way forward after their devastating defeat in 2024. “We took back the House in 2018 while campaigning on health care. We’re able to unite the factions in our own path when we’re talking about health care,” Russell said. “For Democratic leadership it makes sense to have this fight now, on these terms.”Earlier this week, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said the nation could be “barreling toward one of the longest shutdowns in American history.”Recent polls show that more voters are generally blaming President Donald Trump and Republicans for the shutdown than Democrats. But a Reuters/Ipsos survey released last week showed that clear majorities of Americans are placing “at least a fair amount” of blame on Trump, Republicans and Democrats. The overall public opinion deficit for the GOP is narrow enough not to move them off their position — particularly as Trump has taken on a posture of all-out political war with Democrats, including by telling GOP leaders not to bother negotiating with the opposition in the run-up to the shutdown. On Tuesday, Johnson insisted — again — that he won’t negotiate with Democrats on their demands because House Republicans have already passed a stopgap funding measure with no extraneous policy provisions. “I don’t have anything to negotiate. … We did not load up the temporary funding bill with any Republican priorities or partisan priorities at all. I don’t have anything that I can take off of that document to make it more palatable for them,” Johnson told reporters at his daily shutdown news conference in the Capitol. “So all I am able to do is come to this microphone every day, look right under the camera and plead with the American people … to call your Senate Democrats and ask them to do the right thing,” he continued. “We’re not playing games; they’re playing a game.”House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., praised Senate Democrats on Tuesday for continuing to block the GOP funding bill, while saying he’s “flummoxed” that House Republicans are keeping the chamber in recess for a fourth consecutive week.He said Democrats aren’t intimidated by the White House’s attempts to lay off federal workers.“For the Republicans, cruelty is the point,” Jeffries said. “And the fact that they are celebrating, meaning the extremist, the extreme MAGA Republicans, the fact that they’re celebrating firing hard-working federal employees doesn’t strengthen their position with the American people. It weakens it because the American people don’t accept that kind of cruel and callous behavior.” The war of words between the party leaders comes as Trump and his administration have begun to mitigate some of the critical pain points of the shutdown that were expected to drive the two sides to the negotiating table.A food aid program assisting women, infants and children had been set to run out of money because of the shutdown, but Trump officials said they would shift $300 million in tariff revenue to the WIC program to keep it running temporarily. This Wednesday was a key date, with more than 1 million active-duty service members set to miss their first paycheck due to the shutdown impasse. But Trump directed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to move money around again to ensure the troops got paid. Hundreds of thousands civilian federal workers, however, have missed part of their paychecks and will miss a full paycheck on Oct. 24. And many government contractors also are not being paid during the shutdown, and won’t receive backpay unlike federal workers.Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday representing Maryland and Virginia — states with a large number of federal workers — railed against what they described as Trump’s “illegal” move Friday to fire roughly 4,000 federal workers through a “reduction in force,” or RIF.“This is unjust. It is unjustified, and this is the feeling that we’ve awakened with this morning,” Sen. Angela Alsobrooks, D-Md., said in her message to federal workers. “But I want them to recognize that another morning is surely coming, that none of this is sustainable. This evil cannot last.”Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump threatened to inflict more pain on the opposition by shutting down “Democrat programs.” “So we’re closing up programs that are Democrat programs that we wanted to close up … and we’re not going to let them come back. The Democrats are getting killed, and we’re going to have a list of them on Friday,” Trump said. “We’re not closing up Republican programs because we think they work.”Sahil KapurSahil Kapur is a senior national political reporter for NBC News.Scott WongScott Wong is a senior congressional reporter for NBC News. Gabrielle Khoriaty, Kyle Stewart, Brennan Leach and Caroline Kenny contributed.
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Oct. 30, 2025, 6:19 AM EDT / Updated Oct. 30, 2025, 6:22 AM EDTBy Patrick SmithTraffic snarled as stop lights lie among piles of debris. Once-mighty trees and power lines in ruin on streets turned to rivers. Entire communities swept away by winds and flood waters, according to satellite imagery. These are just some of the scenes of devastation Jamaica woke up to Thursday morning, 48 hours after Hurricane Melissa raged through the island nation as the most powerful storm in its history and one of the most potent ever recorded anywhere. The United Nations said the damage was on a level “never seen before.”Cuba is also counting the cost after the storm collapsed houses and blocked roads, after some 735,000 people spent the night in shelters, with the full extent of the damage still unclear.Residents walk through Santa Cruz, Jamaica, on Wednesday, after Hurricane Melissa passed.Matias Delacroix / APThe monster cyclone had winds of up to 185 mph and has killed at least seven people in Jamaica and 27 more across the Caribbean this week.The storm was making its way to the Bahamas and Bermuda Thursday morning and a shelter-in-place hurricane warning was in place for both nations. The storm has greatly weakened to 100 mph, making it a still-dangerous Category 2 storm capable of inflicting major damage.But for Jamaica and Cuba the task of providing aid to affected communities and rebuilding starts now.A flooded street in a neighborhood affected by Hurricane Melissa in Santiago de Cuba on Wednesday.Yamil Lage / AFP via Getty ImagesThe urgent humanitarian challenge has prompted immediate responses from countries around the world and NGOs alike after more than 400,000 people in Jamaica were directly impacted.The U.S. State Department said it was sending a Regional Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) to the region as well as U.S.-based Urban Search and Rescue teams. However one former and two current U.S. officials told NBC News on Wednesday that this response was delayed due to the government shutdown and the elimination of USAID. Previously, the DART team would have been already on the ground in Jamaica, the sources said, but instead missed the opportunity to travel ahead of the storm.The U.S. nonprofit Project Dynamo is sending more than 3,000 pounds of essential aid to Jamaica in multiple aircraft, including water purification kids and medical items, which it calls Operation Cool Runnings, a reference to the cult 1993 movie.Destroyed buildings following the passage of Hurricane Melissa, in Black River, St. Elizabeth, Jamaica on Wednesday.Ricardo Makyn / AFP via Getty ImagesThe U.N. World Food Programme plans to deliver 2,000 emergency food boxes from Barbados as soon as flights resume to Jamaica, enough to feed about 6,000 people a week. “This is a terrible tragedy and there is a real sense of urgency here on the ground,” Brian Bogart, WFP director for the Caribbean, told the U.N.’s news service. The American Red Cross said it was was operating ambulances across Jamaica on Thursday responding to emergencies in shelters and taking people to hospitals Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness was in the hard-hit community of St James on Wednesday, posting video of homes inundated with water and mud.”Despite the difficulties the Jamaican spirit shines through as a strong reminder we are a resilient nation with the capacity to triumph over adversity,” he said.People walk along a road after Hurricane Melissa passed through Spurr Tree, Jamaica, on Wednesday.Matias Delacroix / AP U.N. Resident Coordinator Dennis Zulu told a news conference that Jamaica’s recovery would take months at least. “I don’t think there’s any single soul on this island that was not affected by Hurricane Melissa, ” he said. Jamaica is accepting donations to its official Hurricane Melissa Relief fund. Patrick SmithPatrick Smith is a London-based editor and reporter for NBC News Digital.Larissa Gao, Caroline Radnofsky and Colin Sheeley contributed.
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