Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump Skewered by Judges before SNAP Deadline
Episode Date: October 31, 2025In breaking news, two Obama-appointed judges—one in Rhode Island and one in Massachusetts—have issued emergency orders ensuring that $6 billion in contingency funds will flow to 40 million America...ns living below the poverty line, many of them Trump voters, to prevent a catastrophic cutoff in food stamp payments. Michael Popok explains why there are two separate lawsuits on the same issue, how each judge approached the case differently, and why both rulings ultimately reach the same critical outcome. Harry's: Our listeners get the Harry’s Plus Trial Set for only $10 at https://www.Harry's.com/LEGALAF #harryspod Subscribe to @LegalAFMTN today! Visit https://meidasplus.com for more! Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Coalition of the Sane: https://meidasnews.com/tag/coalition-of-the-sane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Now streaming on Paramount Plus is the epic return of Mayor of Kingstown.
Warden? You know who I am.
Starring Academy Award nominee Jeremy Renner.
I swear in these walls.
Emmy Award winner Edie Falco.
You're an ex-con who ran this place for years.
And now, now you can't do that.
And BAFTA Award winner Lenny James.
You're about to have a plague of outsiders descend on your town.
Let me tell you this.
It's going to be consequences.
Mayor of Kingstown, new season now streaming on Paramount Plus.
You know, it's better than the one big thing?
Two big things.
Exactly.
The new iPhone 17 Pro on TELUS's five-year rate plan price lock.
Yep, it's the most powerful iPhone ever, plus more peace of mind with your bill over five years.
This is big.
Get the new iPhone 17 Pro at TELUS.com slash iPhone 17 Pro on select plans.
Conditions and exclusions apply.
It may be Halloween, but we got some breaking news coming out of two separate
Obama appointed judges, one in Rhode Island, Judge McConnell, one in Boston, Judge Talwani.
And they have both in their own way, they're trying to force the Trump administration to make
snap food stamp payments and use a $6 billion contingency fund in order to avoid
44 million Americans suffering from hunger and malnutrition by Monday.
Two separate cases.
One brought in Rhode Island in front of Judge McConnell.
brought by cities and public interest groups.
One brought by 22 states in Massachusetts in front of Judge Talwani.
Two different orders which basically get to the same place
forcing the Trump administration to use $6 billion at least of contingency funds
that Congress had allocated during the shutdown to pay
for SNAP payments to avoid this major irreparable harm
to people who are suffering.
McConnell does it one way.
Talwani does it another. I'll explain to you why I think they each did it separately in a different way
here on Midas Touch and Legal AF with this breaking news.
44 million Americans, children, babies, disabled, and elderly count on SNAP payments, food stamp-like payments.
And in November 1, there is no funding except for contingency funding.
There's about $6 billion in contingency funding that's available, that was made available.
But of course, Donald Trump is playing politics.
with people's lives. He effectively ordered his secretary of the Department of Agriculture,
which is the regulator over these funds, not to pay, despite Congress saying they should pay during
a shutdown. Despite the fact that in 2019, as Judge McConnell observed during his hearing today,
that just concluded moments ago that the funds, the contingency funds, the rainy day funds,
were used in 2019 to avoid harm to children and babies and disabled and elderly. So why can't it be done now?
So that's what's at stake.
Plus additional funding to make up for the shortfall.
There may only be $6 billion of the $8 billion necessary for November payments,
but there are other funds.
They're called Section 32 funds.
You get them from customs receipts.
Money that comes into the government,
it's sort of like the government's slush fund that comes in every day.
So each judge, interestingly, two different lawsuits,
two different groups of plaintiffs, all trying to reach the same.
same conclusion. Let's start with Judge Talwani in Boston, who in the last, you know,
couple of hours finally issued her temporary restraining order. I have a copy of it. It's going to be up
on legal AF substack. And in her restraining order, she does it differently. I think she's slightly
concerned that she's been reversed before, and she's worried about a series of United States
Supreme Court decisions over the summer, over the spring and summer in which they've generally
sided with the Trump administration in his efforts to cut off funding, like during the Doge period.
And then got mad at courts, including in Massachusetts, like Judge Young, where they ordered funding to be reinstated, oh, no, you can't do that under those certain circumstances.
So Tawani, especially coming out of Massachusetts with Judge Young, who got reprimanded by the Supreme Court for doing that, found a way not to order funding to be immediately provided by a temporary restraining order.
Instead, her order says, I'm going to give you to a Monday for the agency, the Department of Agriculture, to come back to me with a plan.
Now that I've told you that your interpretation of the statute is wrong, that you, even though there's only partial funding available, you are to use the partial funding to keep the program alive and keep these people alive.
Now that I've clarified that for you, come back to me on Monday, this Monday, with a plan to pay.
I'm holding the temporary restraining order in abeyance,
meaning she's ordering them with instructions to make them do the right thing.
If they don't do the right thing, she may come back and issue that temporary restraining order.
That was two hours ago.
Now we have Judge McConnell.
Same issue.
Snap payments, 44 million people, $8 billion, but a different group of plaintiffs brought the case,
this public interest groups and cities.
And the judge, in his argument, he came out right out and said in the hearing today,
you've used the contingency funds in the past.
You know that this doesn't suspend the program.
You know that you can make partial payments.
So I am ordering you.
We don't have the written order yet.
It's coming later today.
But he has said, I am ordering you.
I am entering the temporary restraining order.
I am ordering you to make those payments starting on Monday.
And report back to me on a regular basis.
as to the payments that are being made.
So he didn't seem as concerned
about the United States Supreme Court
as I think Judge Talwani is.
So this is interesting, right,
from a legal AF teachable moment
to see how two different judges,
both Obama appointees,
both in the New England area,
how they separately come at this.
Talwani, a little more cautious,
a little more commercial,
a little more pragmatic.
Let me make you do the right thing.
And if you don't do the right thing,
then I can nail you with a temporary restraining order.
But Connell cut to the chase.
It was like, effectively, I don't care what the United States Supreme Court says about funding.
I'm making an order that you're going to fund.
Look at me.
I've been shaven for years, and for just as long, I've been frustrated with overpriced blades
that doled too fast and leave my neck irritated.
I was spending like 30 bucks for eight refills.
Total scam.
That's why I switched to Harry's Plus, and I'll be honest, I was blown away.
The first time I shaved around my beard with Harry's Plus, I could feel the difference immediately.
It's got this advanced pivoting system that actually reaches every corner of your face.
German engineer blades honed at three different angles and a weighted metal handle.
The heaviest Harry's has ever made for real control and comfort.
You get that barbershop quality shave without the barbershop price.
And because Harris owns their own blade factory in Germany, there's no middleman.
So they keep costs low while giving you their most advanced rate.
or ever. And for a limited time, our listeners can get the Harry's Plus trial set for only $10 at
harries.com slash legal AF. You'll get the all-new Harry's Plus razor, one refined five-blade cartridge,
a two-ounce foaming shave gel, and a travel cover to protect your blades on the go. Just head to
harries.com slash legal AF to claim this offer. And after you purchase, they'll ask you where
you heard about them. Please support our show.
and tell them that we sent you.
Good news is both of these orders now put the Trump administration in a vice.
Now they don't like these rulings, I am sure.
Secretary Rollins, she already said,
I don't know if I'm going to comply with an order to make the payments.
We're evaluating our options, she said in a statement.
So I think Tawani may already have her answer.
I don't think she's going to like the response on Monday
from the federal government about payments.
Because what she said to them in court,
This is the reporting from the hearing with Talwani yesterday.
She said when they started double talking and tap dancing,
the lawyers for the Department of Justice and the U.S. Agriculture Department about,
oh, well, there's not really the program.
There's really no program to fund because the funding expired.
And therefore, we can't.
She said, that's lawyering.
I don't want to hear lawyering.
I want to hear agency action.
So here she's compelling agency action.
And she avoids that sticky little problem McConnell has, the other judge,
and that she's not ordering funding be made.
She's ordering them to go back now with the reinterpretation from the court to go back to the drawing board and come up with a plan to fund.
That's different.
McConnell's like, F that, is my interpretation.
We are funding, ladies and gentlemen.
Let me read to you from Judge Talwani's observations in her order.
She says on page nine that at core defendants, that's the Trump administration, conclusion that the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
culture is statutorily prohibited from funding snap this program because Congress has not enacted
new appropriations is erroneous. To the contrary, defendants are statutorily mandated to use the
previously appropriated contingency reserve, that's the $6 billion, when necessary, and also
have discretion to use other appropriated funds as detailed below. Like go search the couch
for change. Go use Section 32 funds and make up the difference from the customer.
receipts from customs payments.
That's a good suggestion.
She goes on to say, on page 13,
as a matter of law then,
defendants erred in concluding
that the United States Department of Agriculture
is statutorily prohibited
from using the contingency reserve.
Plaintiffs are therefore likely to succeed on the merits.
Now, where she kind of did something artful
to try to thread the needle and void being reversed,
is that on irreparable harm,
which is another element of a temporary restraining order,
She said, we can avoid a reprobable harm, but I don't see it yet for the plaintiffs.
I think it can be avoided if there's agency action by Monday.
If you can reinterpret your rules and come back to me with a plan to pay, we can avoid
your reparable harm.
Sure, there's going to be some people that aren't going to get paid on Monday, but, you know,
I hate to be crass, but we're going to, they might be able to be paid in the future and backpaid
and all this.
So I want to know more on Monday.
She basically kicked the can down the road, but with the threat of a temporary restraining order.
What she said on her conclusion for this judge, this is separate from the McConnell judge in Rhode Island,
she's saying that her motion for restraining order in front of her temporary restraining order,
remains under advisement, meaning I'm going to hold it.
I'm going to keep my powder dry.
No later than Monday, defendants shall advise this court whether they will authorize at least
reduce SNAP benefits for November
and give me their timeline
including about additional funding.
I want to see agency action.
McConnell from the bench said,
I'm issuing the temporary restraining order.
You're going to be making payments.
Wait to you see my written order.
Now, when I get the written order,
I'll come back on Midas and LegalAF,
legal AF substack, legal AF YouTube,
and I'll give you the updates.
But we wanted to kind of come out of the gate
with the story because it's so important
to so many Americans.
As Donald Trump just wants to put them in a vice
and harm some of the most fragile,
some of the most disadvantaged Americans that we have.
We're supposed to be rallying around the disadvantaged.
Utah is considering putting homeless people in camps
so that others don't have to see them being homeless.
This is not the humanity of our country.
This is not patriotism.
There should be an uproar in the halls of
Congress to help 44 million people, many of them because they live below the poverty line in red
states. It's the blue states effectively that brought the case and the blue cities, but it's the red
states that are suffering and their attorneys general just sitting on the sideline. There's no
red state that brought a case. Now, think about that. There's not one red state attorney general
that brought a case to help their people prevent starvation.
and suffering. None. That's disgusting. We'll continue to follow it right here on the Midas Touch
Network. Hit the free subscribe button here, and we're going to hit 900,000 subscribers in our year
in the next two days on Legal AF's YouTube. Help us get there. The bigger our subscriber bases,
the more street cred we have to do the work that you want us to do for our honest commentary.
Same thing. Slide over to LegalAF substack where I'll post this order and the one from Judge
McConnell as it comes in. So you can read it along with a lot of
other commentary and video work there.
Become a paid member for $7 a month.
And now you're paying for our honest commentary
and our First Amendment expression and your own.
So until my next report, this is Michael Popak.
Can't get your fill of legal A.F.
Me neither.
That's why we form the legal A.F.
Substack.
Every time we mention something in a hot take,
whether it's a court filing or an oral argument,
come over to the substack.
You'll find the court filing and the oral argument there,
including a daily roundup that I do call, wait for it,
Morning AF. What else? All the other contributors from LegalAF are there as well. We got some new
reporting. We got interviews. We got ad-free versions of the podcast and hot takes where legal
a.F on substack. Come over now to free subscribe.
