Letters from an American - October 31, 2025
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Discussion (0)
October 31st, 2025.
Yesterday, a reporter asked Representative Joe Ngoose,
a Democrat of Colorado, about the administration's withholding
of reserve funds Congress intended would fund
the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP.
If we come to November 1st and these contingency funds
haven't been released. If nothing has been accomplished in restoring SNAP benefits, will you call
on your Democratic colleagues to reopen the government and deal with these shutdown crises immediately?
Ngoose called out the dynamic in which observers refused to hold President Donald J. Trump
and MAGA Republicans to account, and instead demand Democrats step in to fix whatever crisis
is at hand. The basis for your question is, and maybe the better way to see,
state it would be. If the Trump administration continues to violate the law, if the Trump administration
unlawfully refuses to release funds so that families in Colorado don't go hungry, if the Trump
administration refuses to follow the law, as they have for the better course of the last nine months
violating statute after statute, if in that scenario these actions unfold, then how will Democrats
respond," Ngoose answered. That, in my view, would be a more fair characterization of the question
that you've posed, Nogus continued, because it does feel a little bit like we're in the
twilight zone here, with an administration that is lawless, violates the law with impunity,
is now doing so with respect to the release of funds for families that may go hungry.
Nogus noted that Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, has kept the House of
representatives from conducting business since mid-September, sending members back to their home
districts. We're here in Washington, Naguze told the reporter. You're here in Washington. House Republicans
are gone. Six weeks in counting. Gone. Literally gone. Won't show up in Washington, won't do town halls
back in their respective districts. And somehow the question is posed to the House Democrats as to how we
will respond. Nogus had a solution. He said, the Trump administration needs to follow the law.
You've heard all my colleagues repeatedly suggest we would like to negotiate an agreement in good
faith with our Republican colleagues. That's why we're here in our nation's capital. The question
should be posed to Republicans. When will they get serious about working with us in good faith so that we can
reach an agreement. Ngoose noted that he was frustrated with the fact that Republicans could
just simply abandon their post for six weeks, that the Trump administration could just violate
the law without consequence. It should offend everyone, he said. It certainly offends me.
Johnson announced today that the House would not conduct business again next week.
The House has not held a vote since September 19th.
Also today, two federal judges found the Trump administration's suspension of SNAP benefits during the ongoing government shutdown is, indeed, likely illegal.
The administration claims that it cannot use a reserve fund established by Congress for emergencies to distribute benefits scheduled to be cut off on November 1st.
That claim has drawn lawsuits to try to get food into the hands of the 42 million Americans.
one out of eight U.S. residents who used SNAP, receiving an average of $186 a month.
At a hearing in the lawsuit of Democratic attorneys general and governors against the U.S. Department
of Agriculture, or USDA, the Office of Management and Budget, and their respective leaders,
Brooke Rawlins and Russell vote, Judge Indira Talwani of the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts
noted, Congress has put money in an emergency fund,
and it's hard for me to understand how this is not an emergency.
She gave the administration until Monday
to decide whether to pay SNAP benefits from that fund.
In a lawsuit brought by several cities,
a major labor union, and a group of Rhode Island nonprofits,
U.S. District Judge John McConnell of Rhode Island
ordered the USDA to use those emergency funds
funds to provide SNAP benefits. McConnell ordered the administration to provide an update by noon
on Monday, November 3rd. There is no doubt that the $6 billion in contingency funds are appropriated
funds that are without a doubt necessary to carry out the program's operation, McConnell said.
The shutdown of the government through funding doesn't do away with SNAP. It just does away with the
funding of it. There could be no greater necessity than the prohibition across the board of funds for
the program's operations. After returning from a trip to Asia yesterday, Trump left this morning for
his 13th visit to the Trump Organization's Florida property Mar-a-Lago. Svidate of Huff Post notes this
$3.4 million trip brings to $60.7 million the amount taxpayers have spent,
on the President's 76 golf outings in his second term.
From Air Force One, Trump posted,
I renovated the Lincoln bathroom in the White House.
It was renovated in the 1940s in an Art Deco green tile style,
which was totally inappropriate for the Lincoln era.
I did it in black and white polished statuary marble.
This was very appropriate for the time of Abraham Lincoln,
and in fact could be the marble that was originally there.
Accompanying the post were a series of 24 photographs of the newly renovated bathroom in white marble veined with black, accented with gleaming gold features.
At a time when federal employees are working without pay, furloughed workers are taking out bank loans to pay their bills, healthcare premiums are skyrocketing, and snap is at risk, Trump's celebration of his marble bathroom was so toned deaf it seemed to be.
likely to make the history books as a symbol of this administration. Trump also posted
about his current remodel of the Kennedy Center, where, according to Travis M. Andrews, Jeremy B.
Merrill and Shelley Tan of the Washington Post, ticket sales have plummeted, leaving tens of thousands
of seats empty. I just inspected the construction on the Kennedy Center, he wrote. It is really looking
good. The exterior columns, which were in serious danger of corrosion if something weren't done,
are completed and look magnificent in white enamel, like a different place. Marble is being done,
stages are being renovated, new seats, new chairs, and new fabrics will soon be installed,
and magnificent high-end carpeting throughout the building. It is happening faster than we anticipated,
one of my trademarks. My people are doing a really great job.
We are bringing this building back to life.
It was dead as a doornail, but it will soon be beautiful again.
When he arrived in Florida, a reporter asked Trump about the shutdown and whether he would meet with Democrats,
despite the fact he has, until now, refused to, and has ordered congressional Republicans not to meet with Democrats either.
I'm always going to meet, he said.
All they have to do is open up the country.
Let them open up the country, and we'll meet.
We'll meet very quickly, but they have to open up the country.
It's their fault.
Everything is their fault.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson.
It was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
Thank you.
