October 25–October 31, 2025

THIS WEEK IN…

HUNGER IN AMERICA

In the richest country on earth, more than 40 million Americans rely on the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the nation’s largest anti-hunger program, to be able to purchase food each month. For low-wage workers, the elderly, and people with disabilities experiencing food insecurity and hunger, the program provides desperately needed benefits for their families. Contrary to right-wing propaganda, most working-age recipients do in fact have a full-time job, but many companies, especially in the retail and fast-food industries, don’t pay their employees a living wage, forcing taxpayers and the government to subsidize their labor costs instead. With the government shutdown now in its fourth week, and the Republicans still unwilling to negotiate with Democrats on conditions for continued federal funding, 12% of Americans are facing the grim reality that their SNAP food benefits will run out on November 1. 

In The Guardian, ERIC BERGER goes so far as to predict that Americans might face the greatest hunger catastrophe since the Great Depression.

Long line of people waiting for food, New York City, Feb. 1932 (National Archives)


CALLUM SUTHERLAND
, writing for TIME, headlines his article: A Man-Made Disaster: Food Banks and Experts Issue Grave Warning as SNAP Benefits Set to Run Out Amid Government Shutdown.

The Guardian reporter MICHAEL SAINATO spoke with Katie Giede, a single mother from Conyers, Georgia, who, despite her job at a fast-food chain, depends on SNAP to feed her family. She worries that those who rely on the program are “already not eating enough, so we’re going to lose lives over this. It’s those of us at the bottom that are really feeling it.”

In his analysis The Hunger Games Begin, PAUL KRUGMAN outlines who will be hit hardest by the impending cut-off. Among SNAP recipients, “40 percent are children; 18 percent are elderly; 11 percent are disabled.” And like Katie Giede, “a majority of recipients who are capable of working do work. They are the working poor: their jobs just don’t pay enough, or offer sufficiently stable employment, to make ends meet without aid.”

The loss of SNAP funding will also have serious ripple effects on local economies, small businesses, and farmers. As ELENA PERRY, MONICA CARRILLO-CASAS, and THOMAS CLOUSE report in The Spokesman-Review, ‘A sad reality’: Food banks, grocery stores, residents expect to feel the strain from impending SNAP benefit expirations.

Teal-colored one-story building with sign Fort Bragg Food Bank
Food Bank in California, Fort Bragg (c) Missvain/Wikimedia Commons

David Gilbert looks at how right-wing influencers use racist AI slop videos to spread falsehoods about SNAP recipients in No, SNAP Benefits Aren’t Mostly Used by Immigrants

There are potential stopgap solutions, such as using SNAP’s emergency contingency fund or exercising presidential transfer authority to continue payments even during the shutdown. But the administration and Republican politicians have rejected those options. SARAH FORTINSKY reports in The Hill that Speaker of the House Mike Johnson claims “contingency funds are not ‘legally available’ to cover benefits during the shutdown.”

Republicans have attempted to shift blame onto Democrats for refusing to “compromise,” but ERIC BERGER points out in The Guardian that this framing is misleading. “While Republicans have sought to blame Democrats for the potential loss in benefits that people who make little money rely on, those who work in the food-insecurity space say that is misleading because Donald Trump’s ‘One Big Beautiful Bill Act’ already eliminated almost $187 billion in funding for SNAP through 2034, according to a Congressional Budget Office estimate.”

The Trump administration also took steps to obscure the true scope of hunger in the United States. BETH SHAPIRO writes in her article America’s Hunger Crisis Is Growing. We’re Choosing to Look Away that “last month, the Trump Administration canceled the USDA’s annual Household Food Security Report—the only national data source that measures hunger by age, disability status, and household composition. For the first time in 30 years, America will no longer track hunger nationwide. Without that data, millions of older adults … will vanish from view as the social safety net continues to collapse around them.”

The troublesome truth is that the United States with over 10% of Americans living with food insecurity, has the sad record of ranking among the countries with the highest percentage in the industrialized world.  

…IN OTHER NEWS

Since the start of the second Trump term, it has been ordinary citizens who have fought back against the administration’s actions. Once relied upon to uphold and defend democratic principles, the elite and numerous institutions have surrendered, rolled over and contributed to eroding fundamental rights and undermining the rule of law. In its place, Americans across the country have stepped forward and are not afraid to protest and exercise their rights, even at the risk of facing severe consequences. Many have paid a steep price for their defiance, facing violence, arrests, or even detention.

Demcast and Jennifer Canter met with “ordinary people in forgotten places” in: How Americans Are Blocking Trump’s Militia

Demcast USA

“If convicted, people who showed up to a protest could face “decades of prison time”. Andrew Lee portrays attendees at a July 4th noise demo in Texas who are facing charges for “providing material support to terrorists” in These Dallas Residents Are on the Front Lines of Trump’s War Against “Antifa”

Continuing its weaponization of judicial power to crush dissent, the Trump administration has indicted progressive Democratic congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh along with 5 other individuals for protesting near an ICE facility outside of Chicago report Lisa Rubin and Brandy Zadrozny.

How an innocuous Facebook post landed a man in jail. Liliana Segura on The Absurd Prosecution of a Man Who Posted a Charlie Kirk Meme. Larry Bushart had been jailed for more than a month. The charges were only dropped on Wednesday.

“While the media continues to ignore and even mock Trump’s war on “Antifa” terrorism as legally impossible, the FBI is quietly interrogating protesters” writes Ken Klippenstein. He tells the story of protesters who are being detained for exercising their First Amendment rights. Among them Chicago-based English professor Elias Cepeda who was arrested for speech federal authorities considered “pro-Antifa” and special-needs teacher Miles Serafini who was targeted and questioned by the FBI even though he had not been charged with any crime.

OCTOBER 11–OCTOBER 17, 2025

THIS WEEK IN…

PEOPLE POWER


The Women’s March on Washington, held one day after Donald Trump was inaugurated for his first term in 2017, left many participants uplifted, instilled with a sense of community, and encouraged to continue their engagement in a wide range of political and civil issues. The day saw hundreds of sister marches all over the country, drawing some 4 million participants.  

Pink knitted hat with abstract cat ears
Pink “pussy hat” worn by Judy Bazis on January 21, 2021. Ntl. Museum of American History Collection


In June of this year, around 5 million Americans took to the streets in more than 2,000 locations to protest the Trump administration’s authoritarian policies.


Two of the largest demonstrations in the history of the United States happened during Trump’s presidency.  Their numbers will likely be eclipsed by the second No Kings rallies on October 18. The Cavalry is Coming, predicts NATASHA KORECKI.  


“ ‘The anger level is way higher’ than it was for June protests, which will drive turnout,” says Public Citizen co-president Lisa Gilbert in an interview with SARAH D. WIRE for the USA Today article, ‘No Kings’ protests could draw historic turnout in pushback against Trump”.

No Kings Day events nationwide on October 18, 2025

History has shown that civil resistance works when a movement is large and relentless. In his article, America needs a mass movement – now for The Atlantic, DAVID BROOKS explores successful protest movements and argues that “without one, America may sink into autocracy for decades.”


The reaction from the White House, Republican leaders and other Republican politicians to upcoming mass protests has been to label the No Kings rallies as “hate America” events, and to dismiss the demonstrators as “the rabid base” of the Democratic Party.  ‘No Kings’ has Republicans in Disarray comments JOE PERTICONE for The Bulwark, exploring “why GOP lawmakers are spreading fear about the upcoming rally”. 


As much as the critics of the No Kings rallies want to paint a picture of radicals and dangerous leftists, the people participating in Saturday’s rallies come from all walks of life: Doctor. Teacher. Mamaw. Meet some ‘No Kings’ protesters organizing in ‘deep-red’ Kentucky, as introduced by Kentucky Lantern reporters JAMIE LUCKE and LIAM NIEMEYER.

Protestors with signs in city street
Thousands gather in Lexington, Kentucky, for ‘No Kings” protest. Kentucky Local News WKYT


Millions of people protesting in all 50 states will send a powerful message against the argument that the Trump administration’s policies rest on a strong public mandate. 
ROBERT REICH argues in his opinion piece for Raw Story, that “Trump’s power depends on maintaining the illusion that he’s all-powerful, and that most Americans (apart from those he and his lapdogs label “pro-Hamas,” “terrorists,” and “antifa”) adore him.”

No Kings event poster for October 18, 2025. Source: Indivisible

…IN OTHER NEWS

Donald Trump has long had an odd fixation with the death penalty, dating back decades to 1989, when he demanded the execution of five young Black and Latino men wrongfully convicted of raping a woman in Central Park. During his first term, he ended a 17-year federal moratorium and oversaw 13 executions, the most in a single year in over a century. He pushed to expand capital punishment to crimes like drug trafficking and killing police officers, and authorized alternative execution methods such as firing squads, electrocution, and poison gas. At one point, he even mused about alternative methods like hangings and beheadings. On his first day back in office for his second term, he vowed to pick up where he left off and to pursue more executions.

room with green walls, mirror window and gurney with straps in foreground
Execution chamber with gurney Source: The Innocent Project

His stance is now influencing a wave of state legislation aimed at expanding the death penalty. Surina Venkat examines how Trump’s death penalty push gains traction in statehouses

States have executed 30 people this year, already the highest annual total in more than a decade. Maurice Chammah analyzes What’s Behind the Execution Surge of 2025

Joe Biden halted federal executions and just before leaving office, commuted the death sentences of 37 death row inmates. Unable to kill them, Donald Trump has found a way to still make them suffer as much as possible, as Jess Bravin reports: Biden Spared 37 Killers From Execution. Trump Ordered Up a Lifetime of Torment.