
When Washington Fails, Hartford Steps Up: Inside Connecticut’s Emergency Response to the Federal Food Crisis
As the second-longest government shutdown in U.S. history enters its 34th day, Farmington residents wake to a state scrambling to feed 360,000 neighbors—and municipal elections that suddenly matter more than anyone expected
The federal government has been closed for 34 days, and somewhere between the White House and Capitol Hill, someone apparently forgot that 42 million Americans need to eat.
This analysis of state emergency response and local electoral dynamics is brought to you by Farmington Storage at 155 Scott Swamp Road—because while Washington can’t figure out how to store emergency funds properly, we’ve been storing your stuff securely since forever. Call 860.777.4001. Unlike the federal government, we actually show up to work. 📦
On November 1, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program went dark for the first time in its history. Not during the Great Depression when it was created. Not during the 2008 financial crisis. Not even during the record 35-day shutdown of 2018-2019. This is the first time the program—which feeds one in eight Americans—has simply stopped.
In Connecticut, that translates to 360,000 residents who were scheduled to receive November benefits and didn’t. That’s more people than live in Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport, and Stamford combined.
Governor Ned Lamont’s response was swift and bipartisan in a way that feels almost anachronistic. Within days, his administration allocated $3 million in emergency state funding to Connecticut Foodshare. Senate President Martin Looney, a Democrat, called the federal suspension “a cruel political stunt that weaponizes hunger against the most vulnerable.” House Speaker Matt Ritter, also a Democrat, urged the Trump administration to “open the SNAP portal to states so that we can fund these benefits during the shutdown.”
But here’s the remarkable part: there’s bipartisan consensus toward tapping Connecticut’s rainy day fund if needed. When was the last time Republicans and Democrats agreed on anything related to Trump administration policy?
The Legal Battle Nobody Expected
Two federal judges had to explain to the United States Department of Agriculture how emergency funds work.
Let that sink in for a moment.
U.S. District Judge John J. McConnell Jr. in Rhode Island issued an oral ruling from the bench: “There is no doubt, and it is beyond argument, that irreparable harm will begin to occur if it hasn’t already occurred in the terror it has caused some people about the availability of funding for food for their family.”
He used the word “terror.” A federal judge had to describe the U.S. government’s treatment of its own citizens as causing “terror.”
In Massachusetts, Judge Indira Talwani ruled that the USDA’s suspension of SNAP benefits was “unlawful,” though she stopped short of immediately ordering disbursement. The Justice Department’s argument? Tyler Becker, a government lawyer, told the court: “There is no SNAP program and, as a result, the government cannot just provide SNAP benefits.” His reasoning: without congressional appropriation, the program ceased to exist. “A shutdown is not an emergency,” Becker added.
The USDA has approximately $5-6 billion sitting in a contingency fund—established by Congress precisely for situations like this. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins stated there aren’t “just pots of $9.2 billion sitting around,” and claimed the administration lacks legal authority to transfer funds into SNAP.
Georgetown University law professor David Super disagreed, noting the federal government has “sweeping authority” to transfer money into the contingency fund, pointing out that the administration had already done exactly that to keep WIC funded in October.
President Trump posted on Truth Social Friday evening: “Our Government lawyers do not think we have the legal authority to pay SNAP with certain monies we have available, and now two Courts have issued conflicting opinions on what we can and cannot do.” He added: “If we are given the appropriate legal direction by the Court, it will BE MY HONOR to provide the funding, just like I did with Military and Law Enforcement Pay.”
The disconnect is jarring. The administration found ways to pay active-duty military members using unexpired defense research funds. It transferred $300 million in tariff revenue to keep WIC operating. But the $8.6 billion monthly SNAP requirement? That proved insurmountable.
Connecticut’s Ground Response
The crisis has activated Connecticut’s entire food assistance infrastructure. Connecticut Foodshare distributed groceries to TSA employees at Bradley International Airport and Tweed New Haven Airport. United Way of Southeastern Connecticut reported a surge in mobile food pantry usage. Federal employees—more than 7,000 across the state—are missing their first full paychecks this week.
Lauren Bauer, a fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution, outlined the logistical nightmare even if funding materializes: “It’s too late for payments to be sent on time.” States stopped processing November benefits after receiving the USDA’s October 10 letter. They send SNAP enrollees’ information to vendors days or weeks before the month begins to load funds onto benefit cards. Restarting requires multiple steps, testing, and verification—all while many USDA employees may be furloughed or have departed amid the Trump administration’s federal workforce reduction.
Three million recipients nationwide were scheduled to receive benefits on November 1. For Connecticut’s 360,000 affected residents, Lamont’s $3 million represents roughly $8.33 per person—far short of the average $188 monthly benefit, but something.
“Connecticut families should not go hungry because of Washington’s dysfunction,” Lamont said. “While this $3 million in emergency funding will not fill the entire gap left by the federal government, it represents our state’s commitment to supporting our neighbors during this crisis.”
Tuesday’s Elections: When National Politics Crashes Local Races
Against this backdrop, Connecticut holds municipal elections Tuesday, and for the first time in memory, Washington dysfunction has become a local campaign issue.
In New Britain—where registration shows 13,103 Democrats, 4,628 Republicans, and 12,526 unaffiliated voters—Democratic mayoral candidate Bobby Sanchez sees opportunity. “I’m listening to a lot of individuals throughout the city in New Britain that are not happy with the current administration in Washington, D.C., and I think that’s going to trickle down to our local elections this year,” Sanchez told reporters Saturday. “The working poor are really pissed off they are not going to get SNAP benefits.”
His opponent, Republican Sharon Beloin-Saavedra, bristles at any Trump connection. “I don’t support Trump, but I support Erin Stewart. I support the city of New Britain,” she said. “Donald Trump has nothing to do with the city of New Britain.”
Ben Proto, chair of the Connecticut Republican Party, dismissed national politics as a “tactical distraction employed by Democrats.” His message to voters: “If the most important issue to you is whether or not the pride flag gets flown over town hall, well, I think you’re missing the whole point of municipal government. I think other people care more about other things, like, more importantly, did my trash get picked up?”
In West Hartford, the local GOP’s Facebook post aligning with national Republican leadership drew sharp Democratic criticism for “supporting the chaos of Washington.” Political experts note that while local elections typically center on property taxes and municipal services, the ongoing shutdown and federal program cuts are making national issues impossible to ignore.
The Turnout Crisis
Connecticut’s cities face a democratic legitimacy problem that dwarfs any national political drama.
In the 2023 municipal election, Hartford saw 13.7% voter turnout. Bridgeport: under 20%. New Haven: approximately 25%.
Let those numbers sit for a moment. In New Haven, 75% of registered voters looked at their local government and said, “Not interested.”
New Haven offers a case study in one-party dominance. The city hasn’t elected a Republican mayor since 1953—72 years of Democratic control. Only seven of 30 alder seats face contested races Tuesday. As of Thursday afternoon, just 928 residents had cast early ballots in a city of 135,000.
“It’s pretty low-key,” Yale political scientist Douglas Rae told the Yale Daily News, contrasting New Haven’s sleepy race with New York City’s contested three-way mayoral battle.
Mayor Justin Elicker, seeking his fourth two-year term, faces Republican Steve Orosco, a former MMA fighter and SMASH MMA founder. Elicker highlighted his housing record: “We have in the past five years brought online 5,200 new or renovated units and 2,000 of those are affordable and we have 6,000 more in the pipeline.”
Orosco, running to become the first Republican mayor since William Celentano left office during Eisenhower’s first term, criticizes the city’s relationship with Yale: “No leader has truly taken on Yale, which owns 60% of the city and pays no taxes.”
Patricia Rossi, president of the New Haven League of Women Voters, attributes low turnout to perceived inevitability. “The big reason why the turnout is so low is because none of the races are considered particularly competitive,” she said. “People don’t understand what’s at stake in municipal elections. Who the mayor is, who your alder is, affects whether there’s going to be a park, whether there’s going to be a bus that stops in front of your door, whether your streets are going to get cleaned—all sorts of things that affect you every single day.”
Bridgeport’s Electoral Baggage
Bridgeport’s November 4 ballot includes City Council, Board of Education, and sheriff races, plus two charter revision questions. No mayoral election this year—Mayor Joe Ganim continues in office after February’s peculiar do-over election.
Context matters here. A judge threw out Bridgeport’s 2024 mayoral election after surveillance footage showed a woman making multiple early-morning trips to stuff absentee ballots into a drop box—a violation of Connecticut law requiring people to deposit their own ballots or designate specific authorized individuals. When brought to court, at least two Ganim supporters invoked their Fifth Amendment rights.
Ganim won the do-over. He’d now defeated challenger John Gomes four times: primary, general, re-do primary, re-do general.
This year’s charter questions address the fallout. Question #1 proposes ethics reforms, civil service changes, and uniform standards for departments. Question #2 asks whether Town Clerk, City Clerk, and Sheriff positions should transition from elected to non-partisan civil service appointments after 2027, with the change taking effect in 2031.
Secretary of State Stephanie Thomas called for legislation requiring absentee ballots to be dated and labeled by submission method, plus limits on when applications become available and funding for nonpartisan voter education.
Early voting ran October 20 through November 2 at the Margaret Morton Government Center, 999 Broad Street, Conference Room C. Hours: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. most days, with 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. slots on October 28 and 30.
Hartford’s Quiet Contest
Hartford’s Tuesday ballot features Board of Education races with four candidates: Shontá Browdy (Working Families Party, current board chair), plus Democrats Francoise Deristel-Leger (current vice-chair), Cristher Estrada-Perez, and Tyrone Walker.
The Board oversees Hartford Public Schools, sets policy, approves budgets, and hires the superintendent—currently Dr. Leslie Torres-Rodriguez. Winners serve two-year terms. In 2027, Hartford votes again for Board of Education seats alongside mayor, city council, and treasurer.
Given that Hartford’s 2023 turnout was 13.7%—the lowest among Connecticut’s major cities—Tuesday’s races unfold in what amounts to a participatory vacuum.
The National Picture
Former President Barack Obama spent the weekend campaigning for Democrats in Virginia and New Jersey—states holding gubernatorial elections Tuesday as the first major test of Trump’s second term.
In Virginia, polls show Democrat Abigail Spanberger leading Republican Winsome Earle-Sears by 7-10 points. The RealClearPolitics average has Spanberger at 50.7%, Earle-Sears at 43.1%. YouGov’s final weekend survey found 55% favoring Spanberger, 41% for Earle-Sears.
The shutdown plays directly into Spanberger’s message. Virginia has roughly 320,000 federal workers, many furloughed or working without pay. Since July, about 11,000 Virginia-based federal jobs have been eliminated. At the sole gubernatorial debate, Spanberger highlighted “voter anxiety over the Trump administration’s cuts to the federal workforce.”
Her campaign issued a statement after fresh layoff announcements: “My opponent refused to call on President Trump to stop this chaos. Virginians saw with their own eyes that Winsome Earle-Sears’ loyalty to Donald Trump will always come first, no matter the cost to Virginians and their families.”
Earle-Sears has broadly supported Trump’s federal workforce reductions, arguing Virginia can weather the losses through private sector job creation under the Youngkin administration.
Obama called New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani Saturday to praise his campaign as “impressive to watch” and offered to serve as a “sounding board” going forward. In a 30-minute call, they discussed staffing challenges and campaign promises. Obama hasn’t endorsed—aides cite his policy of avoiding mayoral races—but the call signals Democratic party interest in the race.
In Norfolk, Virginia, Obama told thousands Saturday: “Our country and our politics are in a pretty dark place right now.” He also appeared in Newark with New Jersey Democratic gubernatorial candidate Rep. Mikie Sherrill, who leads Republican Jack Ciattarelli 51% to 42% according to YouGov polling.
What Farmington Residents Need to Know
Connecticut’s statewide voter registration as of late October: 792,887 Democrats (35.7%), 935,892 unaffiliated (42.2%), 489,905 Republicans (22.1%). Total: 2.2 million registered voters.
Tuesday’s elections are municipal only—no federal or statewide races. Key contests include:
- New Britain: Open mayoral seat, Bobby Sanchez (D) vs. Sharon Beloin-Saavedra (R)
- New Haven: Justin Elicker (D, incumbent) vs. Steve Orosco (R) for mayor
- Stamford: Caroline Simmons (D, incumbent) vs. Nicola Tarzia (R) for mayor
- Norwalk: Open seat, Barbara Smyth (D) vs. Vinny Scicchitano (R)
- Hamden: Open seat, Adam Sendroff (D) vs. Jonathan Katz (R)
- Hartford: Board of Education (multiple candidates)
- Bridgeport: City Council, Board of Education, Sheriffs, two charter questions
Polls open 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday. Same-day voter registration available at designated locations. Check your polling place at MyVote.CT.gov.
The Stakes
Connecticut’s response to the SNAP crisis offers a model for state-level intervention when federal programs fail. The $3 million emergency allocation, combined with bipartisan consideration of rainy day fund usage, demonstrates governance can function even amid partisan gridlock.
But state resources only stretch so far. If the shutdown continues beyond November, Connecticut faces choices between depleting reserves or watching 360,000 residents navigate food insecurity. Federal judges have ordered the USDA to use contingency funds, but implementation remains unclear and contested.
Meanwhile, Tuesday’s elections will determine local leadership for the next two to four years. In cities where turnout hovers around 15-25%, a handful of engaged voters shape municipal policy on schools, taxes, public safety, and services.
The federal government may be 34 days into dysfunction, but local governments continue collecting trash, maintaining roads, running schools, and now—in Connecticut’s case—feeding people the federal government has temporarily abandoned. That’s worth showing up for. 🗳️
About the Author
Jack Beckett is senior writer at The Farmington Mercury, where he covers politics, policy, and the occasional municipal zoning dispute that spirals into existential drama. He believes local journalism matters because someone needs to read the 47-page town council meeting minutes so you don’t have to. Jack runs on coffee, sarcasm, and the faint hope that one day people will actually vote in local elections. Previously, he worked at metro dailies before realizing covering Farmington beat covering anywhere else. He lives in town with his family and an alarming collection of reporter’s notebooks. Reach him at jack@wearefarmington.com. ☕
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Jack Beckett writes with one hand while clutching coffee with the other—a skill perfected over 15 years of deadline journalism and municipal meeting marathons. His coffee order: black, strong, constant. His reporting philosophy: local news matters because somebody has to care about zoning variance requests and school budget line items, and apparently that somebody is him. When not covering Farmington, he’s probably reading Farmington history, photographing Farmington architecture, or explaining to relatives why local journalism isn’t dead—just sleeping until someone funds it properly. The Mercury exists because Jack believes communities deserve better than press releases and Facebook rumors. We publish weekly because quality beats speed, depth beats clickbait, and coffee beats everything. Subscribe to our newsletter for thoughtful coverage that respects your intelligence and your inbox. We’re always last to breaking news. First to understanding it. ☕📰
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This article, “When Washington Fails, Hartford Steps Up: Inside Connecticut’s Emergency Response to the Federal Food Crisis,” by Jack Beckett is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0.
“When Washington Fails, Hartford Steps Up: Inside Connecticut’s Emergency Response to the Federal Food Crisis”
by Jack Beckett, The Farmington Mercury (CC BY-ND 4.0)
