The Dictatorship
A looming hunger crisis isn’t doing much to change the shutdown calculus for Democrats
More than 40 million Americans are days away from losing their monthly food benefits as a result of the government shutdown — and the solution from many Republicans and Democrats is for the other side to cave.
Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins has already said that the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program will not be available in November, despite a SNAP contingency fund containing about $5 billion of the roughly $9 billion needed for food benefits next month. Republicans seem intent on putting Democrats to a choice: reopen the government and potentially accept Obamacare premiums spiking, or let people go hungry.
For Democrats like Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., the answer is an easy one: support the Republican continuing resolution.
Fetterman noted that he would like to extend the Obamacare tax credits to make health insurance more affordable, as Democrats are demanding in exchange for their support of the GOP funding bill. But Fetterman said he strongly disagrees with using a shutdown to extract those concessions, particularly when one of the potential outcomes is “hungry people.”
“That is the Democrats’ Sophie’s choice,” said Fetterman, who has voted with Republicans throughout the shutdown in support of the GOP’s funding bill.

Other lawmakers don’t seem to be budging, arguing that the prospect of hungry Americans should only motivate the other party to move off its shutdown position.
“If the Democrats don’t sign onto this C.R.,” Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., said of the GOP continuing resolution, “then we have a lot of things that are going to run out of money, and SNAP is gonna be one of them.”
When BLN asked Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., what she suggested families who rely on food benefits do come November, she had a simple answer. “Call your Democrat senator and tell them to open back up the government,” Britt said.
And facing the prospect of depleted food benefits, Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., asked Politico what it was going to take “for the Democrats to say, ‘Gee, huh, maybe — maybe people should be able to eat?’”
Hawley has offered a temporary solution to the food aid cliff, introducing a bill to reinstate SNAP benefits. “Our kids deserve to eat,” Hawley said in a statement.
But the looming problem isn’t doing much to change the shutdown calculus, even for Democrats, though many Democratic lawmakers are looking for alternative solutions to the SNAP funding shortage.
Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal told BLN he is hoping his home state, Connecticut, will “fill in the gaps” for his constituents. “We’re very firm, explicit, clear, that we are going to insist on extending the health care tax credit and working at the same time for the SNAP benefits,” Blumenthal said.
Similarly, Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., told BLN that in the coming weeks and months, state funding “is being redirected to try to fill in the gaps here.”
But Padilla also admitted that “there is no substitute for the federal government doing its job,” and that “the best way” to address the food aid cliff was for “Republicans to come to the table, work with Democrats to reopen the government and address the spike in health care costs.”

Still, even if some states pick up the slack on food benefits during the shutdown, it’s clear some families could face unexpected challenges come November, and Democrats also aren’t budging from their long-held position that the easiest solution to the shutdown is for Republicans to just give in and extend Obamacare subsidies.
When Politico asked Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., if it was worth pushing the shutdown beyond Nov. 1 given the coming food crisis, Warren reportedly shot back: “Worth it to whom? To people who will lose their health care or to people who will lose their food?”
“We’re people who want Americans to have health care and food,” Warren said. “The Republicans, evidently, don’t care whether they have either.”
Democrats are growing increasingly frustrated by the shutdown and the GOP’s stance, which is that Republicans won’t negotiate on expiring Obamacare subsidies until Democrats vote to reopen the government.
When asked if Republicans were putting Democrats in a position of choosing between health care and food aid, Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., told BLN he was “sick and tired of talking about ways to manage the shutdown when Republicans are refusing to even negotiate.”
We’re talking about families that do not have food for their children. We’ve always seen families where parents went without meals to make sure that their kids had meals, but now they’re not even having meals for their kids.”
Deb Haynes, executive director of Food for Others
Blumenthal also suggested his Republican colleagues are “hurting their own constituents by refusing, utterly and totally refusing, even to come to the table and talk about how we solve this problem.”
Asked whether the expiring SNAP benefits changed her calculus on the shutdown, Sen. Angela Alsobrooks, D-Md., told BLN that the potential cut to SNAP “further highlights the immoral stance that this administration is taking.”
“It also highlights that this has been their plan all along,” Alsobrooks said of Republicans.
She repeatedly emphasized the effect of letting Obamacare subsidies expire and again suggested she wouldn’t change her position on the shutdown over depleting SNAP funds.
But while each side waits for the other to give in, food banks and families are already feeling the pain — anticipating a growing strain on their pantries as the shutdown continues.
Deb Haynes, executive director of Food for Others in Fairfax, Va., told BLN that between the government shutdown, cuts at the Agriculture Department and tariffs raising grocery costs, her food bank hasn’t struggled this much since April 2020. “There are layers upon layers of stressors in the emergency food network right now,” Haynes said.
“We’re talking about families that do not have food for their children. We’ve always seen families where parents went without meals to make sure that their kids had meals, but now they’re not even having meals for their kids,” she said.
Aliymah Lyon, a SNAP recipient in Virginia, uses the benefits to help provide for her 11-year-old son. She said she’s already thinking about how to ration food. “My mom has always taught us how to survive with smaller food, canned goods and all that,” Lyon said. “So yeah, rice, beans and everything you have to use in order to survive.”
But for those who depend on these resources, there’s a growing sense of frustration with lawmakers.
“I really think it’s a shame what they’re doing on Capitol Hill, you know, because you’re playing with people’s lives,” Alonzo Lockridge, who receives SNAP benefits, said. “Help us. We need you guys.”
Arielle Hixson is an Emmy-nominated reporter with over a decade of experience covering innovative national stories across the country. A proud alum of Wesleyan and Georgetown University, she previously worked at NBC Washington as a reporter/producer, covering local news and politics for the DC Metro area as well as creating content for NBC’s owned and operated stations across the country.
Peggy Helman is a desk associate at BLN. She is a former NBC New York intern and proud graduate of Northwestern University.
The Dictatorship
Truth Social leadership shake-up: Kevin McGurn steps in amid stock collapse
NEW YORK (AP) — The Trump business behind Truth Social is replacing a former congressman and big supporter of the U.S. president as the leader of the social media platform after a stock collapse that wiped out billions in investor wealth.
Devin Nunes, a former California congressmen in Donald Trump’s first term, is being replaced temporarily by digital media executive Kevin McGurn as chief executive officer. The company, Trump Media & Technology, didn’t give a reason for Nunes leaving or provide a timeline for his permanent replacement.
After soaring shortly before Trump’s re-election in November 2024, stock in the company plunged 67%, wiping out more than $6 billion in investor wealth.
Trump Media was formed by the Trump family as an alternative to social media giants that had barred him from posting on their platforms after the January 6, 2021 Capitol riots. It said it would not only take on Facebook and Twitter as a “free speech” alternative, but eventually could become a media giant competing with streaming services such as Netflix.
AP AUDIO: Trump media company replaces ex-congressman Nunes as CEO after stock plunge that wiped out billions
AP correspondent Jennifer King reports on a leadership shuffle at the Trump media company.
The stock soared, but it never gained traction with a wide audience despite the president’s frequent use of it for major political announcements, slammed by government ethics experts as a conflict of interest with the presidency.
Since it went public two years ago, Trump Media has lost more than $1.1 billion. Nunes got total compensation of $47 million in 2024, the last year for which figures are available.
The new CEO McGurn said in statement that the company was “poised to take off.”
“In carrying President Trump’s unique, singular vision and message, Truth Social stands for the most powerful brand and voice in history of social media and beyond,” he said.
The Trump Organization didn’t immediately responded to a request for comment.
The company has recently branched into cryptocurrency and another hot business, prediction markets. The latter are online betting venues where people can wager on sports, entertainment and political events.
Both cryptocurrencies and prediction markets have gotten boosts from the Trump administration, in terms of lighter regulation and outright promotion. Last year, for instance, the Trump established a national bitcoin reserve, pushing up the value of that currency.
McGurn, has worked at NBC Universal, Hulu and DoubleClick, among other companies, according to his LinkedIn profile. He is also the CEO of a new shell company that Trump’s two oldest sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, joined last year to buy U.S. manufacturers. That company originally stated in regulatory filings that it would be targeting businesses hoping to tap federal contracts, which would be awarded by the same government run by their father.
The Trump Organization and the White House have repeatedly denied that there are conflicts of interest between Trump’s role as president and the family business.
The Dictatorship
What the DOJ’s Southern Poverty Law Center indictment is really about
ByMichael Edison Hayden
As one of the most high-profile employees of the Southern Poverty Law Center for five years — and as someone who has been outspokenly critical of the organization — I never once heard of the program that allegedly involved paying sources within the Ku Klux Klan, National Alliance and Aryan Nations until the Justice Department published its indictment this week.
What I did hear, frequently, was people in the MAGA movement saying we were some kind of criminal syndicate — part of a sustained propaganda effort to delegitimize the work we did tracking and labeling extremist groups.
Although I find the notion of paying extremists distasteful, even unethical, the indictment feels like the culmination of years of pro-Trump activists consuming and amplifying that kind of propaganda. And, the SPLC, for its part, has called these charges “false allegations.”
One quote from acting Attorney General Todd Blanche’s press conference about the charges against the SPLC stood out to me as particularly absurd:
“The SPLC is manufacturing racism to justify its existence,” he said on Tuesday afternoon.

Imagine, for a moment, believing the SPLC — or any other civil rights organization — needed to fraudulently manufacture racism to sell it in today’s America. Just two months ago, the president shared an artificial intelligence-generated video depicting his Black predecessor and his predecessor’s Black wife as primates. In early 2025, the Trump administration suspended refugee admissions from majority non-white countries while investing in a special program to fast-track white South African Afrikaners into the United States. Racism is not a rare commodity in this country to be manufactured — it’s cheap and easy to find.
A closer look at the indictment raises more red flags. For one, the KKK, National Alliance and Aryan Nations have been largely defanged for years. You rarely hear those names now unless you’re a historian focused on the white supremacist movement. That doesn’t rule out the possibility of criminal wrongdoing on its own, but it does show that this DOJ, in 2026, had to reach back as far as 2013 to find a relatively obscure SPLC program — one that, as a former spokesperson, I had never even heard of.
Another issue is the indictment’s suggestion that the SPLC played a role in planning the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, based on the claim that an informant was “part of a leadership group.” The idea that an informant could have planted the seed for a gathering of white supremacists of that magnitude is completely implausible. We don’t need to speculate about the origins of that deadly event: Unite the Right was effectively a sequel to a similar rally in Charlottesville in May 2017, driven by widespread outrage within the movement over the removal of Confederate statues. Unicorn Riot preserved reams of Discord logs attesting to it.
The indictment feels like the culmination of years of pro-Trump activists consuming and amplifying that kind of propaganda.
So, leaving open the possibility that something comes out in the trial that I don’t know about yet, these charges look like a piece of political theater to shore up a wayward MAGA base beleaguered by the scandal around Jeffrey Epstein and an increasingly unwieldy debacle in Iran. It’s a MAGA base that understands the SPLC as one of the primary villains in its propaganda stories and enjoys seeing it suffer.
But if the DOJ argues that paying informants furthers hate, and that this makes the use of paid informants fraudulent, won’t the SPLC’s lawyers simply demonstrate how those efforts contributed to these groups no longer being around? If the SPLC propped up the National Alliance to defraud donors, why is it essentially defunct? Why does the once robust Aryan Nations group no longer exist?
If you’ve read this far and assumed I have an incentive to support my former employer, I don’t. I have a different life now — with a book out, a podcast and teaching. After producing some of the SPLC’s more notable investigative stories from 2018 to 2023, I’ve repeatedly criticized them in media appearances.

As chronicled in my book, “Strange People on the Hill,” the SPLC settled with me out of court after I raised allegations of racial discrimination and union busting against them. I have also publicly accused the organization of deliberately taking a lower profile during President Donald Trump’s second term — hoping to evade the kind of targeting that is befalling it now. The SPLC has done many things over the years, good and bad. It has been invaluable in tracing how MAGA brought fringe racist ideas into the mainstream conservative movement. It has also been clumsy, reactionary and, at times, foolish. This program involving paid informants may indeed be one of those clumsy and foolish chapters.
But to understand why a weaponized DOJ might choose this particular case amid all of the white-collar crimes it isn’t pursuing in America today, you first need to understand the narrative that’s been built around the SPLC for years — and how useful it has become to the corrupt men who run this country.
Michael Edison Hayden
Michael Edison Hayden is a leading expert on far-right extremism in the United States. His debut book, “Strange People on Blue Light News”— a chronicle of a West Virginia town in the five years following a white nationalist group’s purchase of a local castle — will be published by Bold Type Books/Hachette on April 7, 2026. Hayden also co-hosts the podcast, “Posting Through It,” with new episodes released every Monday and Thursday.
The Dictatorship
Judge temporarily strikes down Virginia’s redistricting referendum
A Virginia judge on Wednesday blocked the certification of a redistricting referendum that allows the state to redraw its congressional and legislative maps, less than 24 hours after voters approved the measure.
The rulingissued by Tazewell County Circuit Court, halts state officials from finalizing the results of the ballot measure, which sought to overhaul Virginia’s redistricting process.
This latest move prevents the Virginia Department of Elections and other officials from implementing the new redistricting referendum unless it is overturned by a higher court.
Other states attempting similar redistricting moves have faced lengthy legal battlesleaving the ultimate outcome uncertain.
Tazewell County Circuit Court Judge Jack Hurley ruled Wednesday that the redistricting referendum violated parts of Virginia’s Constitution, including how such amendments must be approved and submitted to voters.
Hurley said the proposal had not been properly authorized by the General Assembly before being submitted to voters. The judge also called the ballot language “flagrantly misleading” and did not accurately describe the measure to voters.
The attorney general’s office said in a statement that it plans to immediately appeal the decision.
“As I said last night, Virginia voters have spoken, and an activist judge should not have veto power over the People’s vote,” Attorney General Jay Jones said in a statement. “We look forward to defending the outcome of last night’s election in court.”
Redistricting has long been a contentious issue in Virginia, as in many states, with debates often centered on partisan gerrymandering and the fairness of electoral maps.
The move was considered a victory for Democrats and could offer a potential boost for the party as they head into the midterms because the proposed redraw could expand their advantage to 10-1.
For now, the judge’s order leaves Virginia’s redistricting process unchanged and raises new questions about the viability of reform efforts moving forward. Both sides are likely to press ahead with a prolonged legal fight.
The Virginia Supreme Court paused an earlier rulingby Hurley ahead of the referendum, which allowed Tuesday’s vote to move forward while it reviews the case, which remains pending.
Ebony Davis is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW based in Washington, D.C. She previously worked at BLN as a campaign reporter covering elections and politics.
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