For nearly three decades, federal law has made it clear: undocumented immigrants are not eligible for SNAP benefits. This provision was not passed in some late-night partisan maneuver. It was signed into law in 1996 by Democratic President Bill Clinton as part of the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act — the much-heralded “welfare reform” package. The reasoning was straightforward: federal benefits should go to those who are lawfully part of the federal compact.
Clinton’s law was explicit:
- Undocumented immigrants are completely ineligible for federal benefits like SNAP, Medicaid, and TANF.
- Legal immigrants — even with green cards — face a five-year waiting period before qualifying, unless they’re refugees, asylees, or in certain humanitarian cases.
- States may use their own money to create programs for undocumented immigrants, but federal dollars cannot be used for that purpose.
This wasn’t a Republican plan. This was a Democratic president, with a Democratic First Lady standing by his side, signing a bipartisan agreement to limit welfare eligibility strictly to those lawfully in the country. The logic was simple: federal benefits are for members of the federal compact — citizens and lawful residents.
Yet here we are in 2025, with state officials — particularly in New York — spending taxpayer dollars in court, not to uphold that law, but to fight against the federal government’s efforts to enforce it. Attorney General Letitia James has joined multiple lawsuits against the Trump administration over new rules that require states to verify and share immigration status data for SNAP applicants.
Let’s be clear: these lawsuits are not an attack on some new Trump invention. They are a pushback on the enforcement of a law signed by a Democrat. The political spin suggests this is about resisting Trump, but the underlying statute was born in a Democratic White House.
The irony is thick. James insists she is “protecting immigrant communities” from government overreach. But the real question is this: If the law already prohibits benefits for those here illegally, why is there such resistance to verifying who is eligible?
This is not about compassion. It is about compliance. States administer SNAP with federal funds. If they want to create separate food programs for people in the country illegally, they can — but only with state dollars, not with money from Washington that comes with clear rules attached. Any attempt to mix the two is a misuse of federal resources.
Some will argue that requiring immigration status checks will scare away eligible U.S. citizens in “mixed-status” households. That is not an argument against enforcement — it is an argument for ensuring that outreach and communication are clear. No one has a “right” to federal benefits without meeting the eligibility criteria. Fear of enforcement is not a legal exemption.
The issue here is not kindness or cruelty. It is whether the law applies equally, or whether some state leaders believe they can selectively ignore federal statutes because they dislike them. This same logic — if applied elsewhere — would be chaos. Imagine if a state refused to collect income taxes because it disagreed with federal tax policy. That would be unthinkable.
In the end, the rule of law is not a buffet line where officials pick and choose what to serve. If states accept federal funds, they accept the federal conditions attached to them. Anything else is not “resistance” — it’s breach of contract, paid for by the very taxpayers the law is supposed to protect.
The law is the law. And in this case, it’s a Democratic law being undermined under the false pretense of resisting a Republican president. If New York or any other state wants to rewrite it, they should take that fight to Congress. Until then, they have a duty to enforce it, not undermine it.