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Blue states blasted for funneling millions in SNAP cash for fast-food meals

By Eric November 20, 2025

In a striking revelation, Republican Senator Joni Ernst of Iowa has highlighted that U.S. taxpayers are shouldering nearly $250 million annually in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits spent on fast-food meals across nine states, predominantly led by Democratic governors. This alarming statistic comes from Ernst’s office, which points out that states like California, New York, and Illinois have opted into the Restaurant Meals Program (RMP). Initially designed to assist homeless individuals without access to kitchens, the program has expanded over time to include disabled individuals and the elderly, raising questions about its current scope and effectiveness.

The RMP, established following a loophole in the 1977 SNAP legislation, allows eligible individuals to purchase prepared meals, including those from fast-food chains, with their SNAP benefits. Ernst’s findings reveal that California is a significant contributor to the program’s costs, accounting for over 90% of the total RMP expenditures nationwide from June 2023 to May 2025. For instance, California’s expansion of the program in 2021 permitted numerous fast-food outlets, such as McDonald’s and Domino’s, to accept SNAP benefits, thus facilitating the purchase of hot meals that many argue stray from the program’s original intent of promoting nutritional food options. Ernst has voiced her concerns, stating, “The ‘N’ in SNAP stands for nutrition not nuggets with a side of fries,” and has introduced the McSCUSE ME Act to reform the program by limiting spousal eligibility and prioritizing grocery stores that offer healthier prepared food options.

This push for reform comes in the wake of heightened scrutiny over SNAP, particularly following the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, which raised alarms over potential fraud within the program. As federal spending on SNAP reached record highs during the pandemic, Ernst’s proposed legislation aims to provide greater transparency by requiring states to report on vendor participation and program costs annually. With the ongoing debate around SNAP’s effectiveness and the rising costs associated with fast-food purchases under the program, Ernst’s initiative seeks to realign SNAP’s objectives with its foundational goal of ensuring access to nutritious food for those in need.

FIRST ON FOX:
U.S. taxpayers are footing nearly $250 million a year in SNAP benefits spent on
fast-food
meals across just nine states, most of which are blue states, according to Republican Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst.
Nine states, including Arizona,
California
, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Rhode Island and Virginia — all of which are Democrat-run states except for Virginia — are opted into a SNAP program called the Restaurant Meals Program (RMP), which has spent nearly $250 million a year on hot meals, including fast-food, Ernst’s office found. 
The modern day Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program was established in 1964 under the Food Stamps Act to provide basic food needs such as meats and fruits and vegetables to financially vulnerable Americans. Hot foods or foods ready for immediate consumption were not eligible for purchase under the program as its main mission was to provide staple foods to be prepared at home. 
A 1977 loophole, however, allowed states to opt into a program called the Restaurant Meals Program, which was established to allow homeless individuals who do not have a kitchen to purchase prepared meals using SNAP benefits, according to Ernst’s office. The eligibility for the program expanded in the following years to include disabled individuals, the elderly and their spouses, according to the office. 
FOOD-STAMP FRAUD NUMBERS EXPOSE WHICH STATES ARE DRAINING THE MOST TAXPAYER DOLLARS
Nine states are opted into the program, which requires participating restaurants to sign an agreement with the state that is then authorized by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which oversees the SNAP program writ large. Restaurants that participate in the program were historically a small group but have since expanded, most notably in California in the Biden era, Ernst’s office said. 
California expanded its program statewide, for example, in 2021 that allowed restaurants to accept CalFresh benefits via SNAP at a swath of top fast-food chains stretching from McDonald’s to Domino’s Pizza to Jack in the Box. 
Ernst’s office found that from June 2023 to May 2025, more than $475 million in taxpayer dollars funded Restaurant Meals Program meals at fast-food establishments. During that same time period, $524 million in taxpayer funds were spent through the Restaurant Meals Program overall, meaning California accounted for more than 90% of the nation’s total Restaurant Meals Program funds from June 2023 to May 2025, according to the office. 
“The ‘N’ in SNAP stands for nutrition not nuggets with a side of fries,” Ernst told Fox News Digital. “I wish I was McRibbing you but $250 million per year at the drive-through is no joke and a serious waste of tax dollars. I hate to be the one to say McSCUSE ME
,
 but something needs to be done because taxpayers are not lovin’ it.”
TRUMP SAYS SNAP BENEFITS WILL ONLY RESUME WHEN ‘RADICAL LEFT DEMOCRATS’ OPEN GOVERNMENT
The data found that between June 2023 and May 2025 $41.4 million funds went through Restaurant Meals Program in Arizona, $3.6 million in New York, $1.3 million in Michigan, $995,900 in Rhode Island, $649,000 in Massachusetts, $479,000 in Illinois, $308,500 in Virginia and $8,600 in Maryland. 
TRUMP ADMINISTRATION CITES WIDESPREAD MISUSE OF SNAP AS FUNDING LAPSES DURING SHUTDOWN
Ernst’s introduced legislation Thursday, dubbed the McSCUSE ME Act, to rein in the scope of the Restaurant Meals Program. Specifically, the bill would continue allowing homeless, elderly and disabled individuals to continue using the program, but ending spousal eligibility. 
CHARTS ILLUSTRATE THE SCALE OF SNAP AS MILLIONS FACE POTENTIAL BENEFIT LAPSE
The legislation also would reel in which vendors are able to participate in the program, specifically restricting fast-food vendors in favor of grocery stores that have hot bars to better ensure availability of healthy prepared food options. The legislation would also require states to produce public annual reports showing how many vendors participate in the Restaurant Meals Program, the number of participating beneficiaries and total costs for the program, Fox News Digital learned. 
The report and legislation comes after the U.S. government just emerged from the longest
government shutdown
in history, at 43 days, that included putting the food assistance program under heightened scrutiny over fraud and concern as recipients saw disruptions to their access. 
Upon the reopening of the government, the Trump administration is requiring all SNAP beneficiaries to reapply for the program in an effort to prevent fraud. 
Federal spending on SNAP overall climbed to record highs under the Biden administration, Fox News Digital previously reported, at $128 billion in 2021 and $127 billion in 2022 during the pandemic. By the Biden administration’s final year,
SNAP cost $99.8 billion.
Fox News Digital’s Amanda Macias contributed to this report.

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