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Supreme Court pauses order requiring Trump fund food benefits

Supreme Court pauses order requiring Trump fund food benefits
Volunteers load boxes of food into cars during an event to deliver emergency food relief to federal workers and SNAP recipients amid the US government shutdown in Leonia, New Jersey on Nov. 6, 2025. (Reuters)
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Supreme Court pauses order requiring Trump fund food benefits

Supreme Court pauses order requiring Trump fund food benefits
  • Trump administration does not have to immediately pay SNAP food benefits defunded during the government shutdown
  • US government agencies have been grinding to a halt since Congress failed to approve funding past September 30

WASHINGTON: The US Supreme Court said Friday that the Trump administration does not have to immediately pay SNAP food benefits defunded during the government shutdown, a temporary order that leaves millions in limbo.
A lower court this week ruled that President Donald Trump’s government must fully fund the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for November by the end of the day Friday.
It ordered the administration to use contingency funds to make a multi-billion-dollar payment to states so they could distribute food stamps to around 42 million Americans who rely on SNAP to afford groceries.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson issued the so-called administrative stay that pauses the process and gives the court system additional time to consider the administration’s request.
Earlier Friday, the Department of Justice (DOJ) appealed to the court saying only Congress had the power to resolve the crisis.
“The core power of Congress is that of the purse, while the Executive is tasked with allocating limited resources across competing priorities,” the DOJ wrote.
But a lower court “took the current shutdown as effective license to declare a federal bankruptcy and appoint itself the trustee, charged with picking winners and losers among those seeking some part of the limited pool of remaining federal funds.”
US government agencies have been grinding to a halt since Congress failed to approve funding past September 30, and the pain has been mounting as welfare programs hang in the balance.
The Supreme Court ruling comes even as the federal government has made efforts to dole out the necessary payments to states.
Democratic officials have expressed frustration with the Supreme Court stay and Trump’s move to halt the SNAP funding.
“It’s disgraceful that the administration chose to go to court instead of fulfilling its responsibility to the American people,” New York Attorney General Letitia James, who has clashed repeatedly with Trump, posted on X.


Women make inroads in Pakistan as they become firefighters and barriers slowly fall

Updated 11 sec ago

Women make inroads in Pakistan as they become firefighters and barriers slowly fall

Women make inroads in Pakistan as they become firefighters and barriers slowly fall
KARACHI: Thick black smoke clawed at the sky last week over the industrial zone in Pakistan’s largest city as firefighter Syeda Masooma Zaidi raced toward the raging blaze in Karachi.
The storage facility was packed with truck and car tires, and the flames leapt hungrily, black plumes twisting skyward. Heat shimmered off the asphalt, turning the air heavy and acrid, stinging her eyes and lungs.
Zaidi did not hesitate amid the deafening roar, hose in hand, her helmet strapped tight.
The 23-year-old and the rest of her firefighting team — all men — aimed the jets of water at the molten rubber, which hissed and steamed under the torrent. The team worked methodically, every movement precise, every second critical.
Hours later, the blaze was under control. Nearby factories were spared, no lives were lost — though the damage ran into tens of thousands of dollars (millions of Pakistani rupees).
When the firefighters emerged from the smoke, their faces streaked with soot, dozens of onlookers cheered behind safety lines.
Zaidi is a rare sight in a country where women firefighters were mostly unheard-of until 2024. Her career — like those of other women in Pakistan’s emergency services — underscores the gradual inroads being made in the staunchly patriarchal and traditional Islamic nation.
Some were inspired when Shazia Perveen became Pakistan’s very first woman firefighter in 2010 in eastern Punjab province, where she is now a trainer. In Sindh province, where Karachi is the capital, women started joining firefighting services in 2024 after getting their training in Punjab.
And though they still make up less than 1 percent of Pakistan’s firefighters, authorities say more women are likely to join firefighting units in the coming years in the country of 255 million.
Most Pakistani women who go into professional fields choose careers as doctors, engineers or teachers, Zaidi said. She wanted to show that “we can do this too.”
Her chief fire officer, Humayun Khan, has praised Zaidi and her female colleagues.
Dr. Abid Jalaluddin Shaikh, chief of the Sindh Emergency Service, said Zaidi is one of 50 women firefighters in the province. Another 180 are in training as rescue divers, ambulance medics and emergency responders.
“The focus is no longer on breaking taboos,” he said. “Now we see real results.”
Zaidi graduated from the Punjab Rescue Service Academy, where she mastered high-angle rescues that use ladders, ropes and trolleys and typically involve victims trapped in skyscrapers, industrial towers or other high elevations, as well as various types of fire and water emergencies.
Still, she says she feels many doubt her ability on the job.
“When we arrive, people say, ‘She’s a girl — how can she rescue anyone?’” she said. “Every time we save a life, we prove that women can also do this job.”
Zaidi’s fellow firefighter Areeba Taj, also 23, recalled missions in Karachi where she and her female colleagues helped save lives amid chaos and smoke. Their supervisor, Ayesha Farooq, highlighted the unique strengths women bring, especially when victims include women and children.
“By joining rescue services, they earn respect — for themselves, and for the country,” Farooq said.
Zaidi, who grew up with seven brothers and one sister, says her motivation was simple: courage, duty, and faith.
“People still doubt us,” she said. “But every time we go out there, we keep proving them wrong.”
As the skyline above the Karachi industrial zone cleared last week, Zaidi returned with her team to the fire station, ready for the next alarm.
Every day on the job, Zaidi, Taj and their other female colleagues prove that gender is no barrier to bravery.