SNAP-TRUMP ADMINISTRATION
Illinois urges the U.S. to end the shutdown or release USDA SNAP reserves to keep SNAP benefits paid, condemning hunger as a political tool.
Illinois urges the U.S. to end the shutdown or release USDA SNAP reserves to keep SNAP benefits paid, condemning hunger as a political tool.
Status and procedural history
- Bill type: House Resolution (non‑binding)
- Introduced: January 16, 2025
- Committee referrals and actions: Referred to House Judiciary; later considered on Local & Consent Calendars; placed on Congratulation & Memorial Resolutions Calendar; laid before and adopted by the House on May 23, 2025 (nonrecord vote). Additional co‑sponsors were added and the measure was later referred to the Rules Committee (late Oct 2025).
- Note: The file for HR 543 also contains text of a separate, unrelated honorary resolution recognizing Dr. Teresa T. Byrd; the substantive summary below focuses on the SNAP‑related resolution titled “SNAP‑TRUMP ADMINISTRATION.”
Main purpose and intent
- The resolution expresses the Illinois House of Representatives’ position urging the federal executive branch to end a federal government shutdown and/or to use existing Department of Agriculture (USDA) SNAP reserves so Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits continue to be paid. It condemns using hunger as a political tool and requests that copies of the resolution be sent to federal officials and the Illinois Congressional delegation.
Key findings and factual claims in the resolution
- SNAP served an average of 41 million Americans per month in 2024 (over 12% of the U.S. population).
- In Illinois, roughly 1.9 million people in over one million households receive SNAP; 45% of SNAP households include a child, 37% include an elderly adult or a person with a disability, and 44,217 Illinois veterans depend on SNAP.
- SNAP supports 18,254 Illinois jobs, $966 million in wages, and has a $7.2 billion annual impact on Illinois GDP.
- The USDA reportedly has a $6 billion reserve specifically earmarked for SNAP; the resolution states this reserve could cover average benefits for more than 31 million Americans and urges it be used if shutdown conditions would otherwise interrupt payments.
- The resolution estimates replacing SNAP payments in Illinois would cost in excess of $350 million per month.
Key provisions (what the resolution asks or does)
- Calls on the Trump Administration to:
- End the federal government shutdown and restore funding to SNAP and other critical federal programs; or
- If the shutdown cannot be ended expediently, to release the USDA SNAP reserve to maintain benefit payments while negotiations continue.
- Condemns the administration’s refusal (as characterized in the text) to use the SNAP reserve and labels withholding benefits as an unacceptable political tactic.
- Directs that copies of the resolution be delivered to President Donald J. Trump, Vice President J.D. Vance, Congressional leaders (House Speaker Mike Johnson; Senate Majority Leader John Thune), U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins, and members of the Illinois Congressional delegation.
Who would be affected
- SNAP beneficiaries nationally and in Illinois — particularly children, elderly adults, people with disabilities, veterans, and low‑income families who rely on benefits for basic nutrition.
- Indirect economic impacts on Illinois jobs, wages, and GDP tied to SNAP spending.
Limitations and legal effect
- As a House resolution, HR 543 is a non‑binding expression of the Illinois House’s views and does not compel federal action. It formally communicates state legislative concern and requests federal officials take specified steps.
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