The Republican Party and its allies can’t seem to decide whose side it’s on as millions of Americans are set to lose SNAP benefits as a result of the ongoing government shutdown.
Democrats have been in virtual lockstep in their support for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, and the need to continue aid to its beneficiaries, which include millions of children and working-class Americans. Republicans, on the other hand, can’t seem to decide whether their message should be that SNAP recipients are the victims of a shutdown they are blaming on the Democrats, or that they are lazy grifters finally getting the harsh wakeup call they deserve.
The Trump administration posted a message on the U.S. Department of Agriculture website blaming Democrats for the shutdown and signaling sympathy for SNAP recipients, saying Democrats should “reopen the government so mothers, babies, and the most vulnerable among us can receive critical nutrition assistance.” (Some legal experts have argued that using of the federal government’s resources for political messaging in this way is a violation of the Hatch Act.)
Recent polling data has shown that a plurality of the country blames Republicans, not Democrats, for the shutdown, and the Trump administration’s claim that it can’t tap billions of dollars in contingency funds set aside for SNAP is undercut by the fact Trump’s first administration tapped those funds for this exact purpose during the 2019 shutdown.
The administration’s performative compassion hasn’t been embraced across the Republican Party or among conservative influencers, however.
Take, for example, Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville, who claimed this week that Democrats are “getting a little bit tight right now” over SNAP funding because “it’s their constituents — a lot of them in some of these inner cities — that’s gonna need SNAP to survive.” (Hundreds of thousands of people in Tuberville’s largely rural state, where he’s running for governor, could be affected by the loss of SNAP benefits, as NBC News affiliate WVTM reported.)
The senator went on to complain about “a lot of young men on SNAP that should be working.” The most recent data available from the USDA, from fiscal 2023, found “39% of SNAP participants were children, 20% were elderly, and 10% were nonelderly individuals with a disability,” and 2020 data from the Government Accountability Office confirmed that millions of SNAP recipients are also working full time.
On the House side, Rep. Clay Higgins, R-La., posted a rant to X on Thursday in which he faulted SNAP recipients for not having stocked up on groceries ahead of time. He argued that recipients who haven’t used their benefits stockpile at least one month’s worth of food “should never again receive SNAP, because wow, stop smoking crack.”
There are 22 million American households receiving SNAP benefits for groceries, at $4200 per year on average.
Try to get your head wrapped around how many pantries you can stock with $4200 dollars in properly shopped groceries.
Any American who has been receiving $4200… pic.twitter.com/3PKP0oMU8T








