WASHINGTON, Nov 3 (Reuters) - The administration of President Donald Trump has made $450 million in tariff revenue available for a childhood nutrition program imperiled by the federal government ...
An injection of $450 million for WIC comes as the Trump administration announced it would only fund partial benefits for another food aid program, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or ...
The Agriculture Department said that it would not use the funds to cover benefits in November, imperiling a program 42 million people use to pay for groceries. By Linda Qiu and Tony Romm Reporting ...
A sign advertises that WIC and Food Stamps are accepted at a convenience store, as tens of millions of Americans might not receive food stamps and other food aid in November because of the government ...
The Trump administration told a judge that it would use contingency funds to pay at least some SNAP benefits during the ongoing U.S. government shutdown, per a CNBC report. The report went on to say ...
The Trump administration said in court filings Monday that it would use contingency funds to provide partial SNAP benefits in November after a judge on Friday ordered the Department of Agriculture to ...
Trump had said it would be his "honor" to fund the food assistance program. The Trump administration has committed to partially funding the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program with a $4.65 ...
During the federal government shutdown in early November 2025, social media users claimed U.S. President Donald Trump used $750 million in tariff revenue to keep the Special Supplemental Nutrition ...
The Trump administration told a federal judge Monday it will deplete what remains of a $6 billion contingency fund to pay a portion of food stamp benefits in November amid the ongoing partial federal ...
Jake Rosen is a reporter covering the Department of Justice. He was previously a campaign digital reporter covering President Trump's 2024 campaign and also served as an associate producer for "Face ...
A jury convicted the leader of a Minnesota nonprofit organization Wednesday for her role in a $250 million pandemic fraud scheme that "exploited" a federal child nutrition program, prosecutors said.
The Trump administration told a judge on Wednesday that borrowing money from the Child Nutrition Programs to fully fund SNAP benefits in November would leave funding for school lunches for millions of ...