Millions of families just survived the longest shutdown in US history. Now they’re bracing again as politicians turn food assistance into a bargaining chip.
Food assistance should not be subject to politics, yet the Trump administration is now requiring over 20 Democratic-led states to share sensitive SNAP recipient data—including Social Security and immigration details—or risk losing funding. Officials call it "program integrity," but the effect is clear: millions of low-income families may once again have their access to food threatened by political disputes, according to the Tribune News Service.
SNAP, or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, supports over 40 million Americans. It was created to address real hunger in the country, acknowledging that wages have not kept pace with the cost of living. The programme ensures children, seniors, disabled adults, and working families can access food, regardless of which party leads their state. SNAP serves as an essential support, not a tool for political debate.
Yet now this vital assistance is being used for political leverage. This moment lands especially hard because families just came out of another political standoff: the longest government shutdown in US history. During the shutdown, SNAP recipients held their breath, wondering whether their November benefits — arriving during Thanksgiving — would come on time. Imagine heading into a holiday season not with excitement, but with anxiety about whether you can put food on the table.
When the shutdown ended, families exhaled. But that relief didn’t last long. Barely weeks later, the same families are once again living on high alert, scanning headlines to see whether their benefits could be delayed, reduced, or used as bargaining chips. The emotional whiplash is not a side effect — it is part of the harm.
People who already navigate daily precarity should not have to analyse political negotiations to determine whether their groceries will be covered next month. There’s something profoundly wrong with a system that forces families into a cycle of uncertainty every time elected officials pick a new fight. A federal judge has already stepped in— temporarily blocking the USDA’s demand that 21 states and Washington, DC, hand over sensitive personal data on SNAP recipients, including Social Security numbers and immigration-related information.
Fraud is often invoked as justification for stricter oversight, but SNAP fraud rates remain extremely low—historically around 1 percent, according to the USDA’s own quality-control data. Experts at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities note that SNAP already has one of the strongest oversight systems of any public benefit programme.
States aren’t resisting oversight—they’re resisting exposing vulnerable residents to unnecessary risk. Digital privacy experts at the Electronic Privacy Information Center have raised red flags about the federal government’s push for a centralised database containing the personal information of tens of millions of low-income people. It warns that once all these records are aggregated, they “become vulnerable to breaches, misuse, and mission creep.”
We are not talking about fraud. We are talking about power. Food aid is becoming a pressure point in larger political battles. And the people who feel the consequences are not the politicians at the negotiating table; they are the families who rely on SNAP to prevent hunger. Children make up roughly 40% of SNAP participants, with millions more being older adults, people with disabilities, and working families trying to cover basic needs in an increasingly expensive economy.
Decades of research show the stakes: stable access to food is foundational to health, learning, and economic stability. Children’s HealthWatch warns that food insecurity “impedes children from reaching their full physical, cognitive, and psychosocial potential,” while the Food Research & Action Center finds that it increases adults’ risk of chronic disease, poor mental health, and higher health-care costs.