- Office of the Attorney General
Media Contact
Allie Zuliani, Deputy Press Secretary
Boston — Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell today joined a coalition of 21 attorneys general and the state of Kentucky in filing a lawsuit challenging the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) demand that states turn over personal and sensitive information about millions of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) recipients.
“All parents deserve to be able to feed their children without having their privacy violated or the fear of being deported,” said AG Campbell. “I will not allow this Administration to fuel their cruel immigration agenda with information wrongfully taken from families who are just trying to make ends meet. I’m proud to stand with my colleagues in demanding federal privacy laws are upheld.”
SNAP is a federally funded, state-administered program providing billions of dollars in food assistance to tens of millions of low-income families across the country. SNAP applicants provide their private information on the understanding, backed by long-standing state and federal laws, that their information will not be used for unrelated purposes. USDA has suggested that it could withhold administrative funding for the program if states fail to comply with their demand to turn over recipients’ personal data—effectively forcing states to choose between protecting their residents’ privacy, which they’re required to do under state and federal law, and providing critical nutrition assistance to those in need.
Massachusetts is expected to receive roughly $106 million this year to administer the SNAP program, and any delay in that funding could be catastrophic for the state and the residents who rely on the program to put food on the table.
For sixty years, Massachusetts and other states have administered SNAP, which serves as an essential safety net for millions of low-income Americans by providing credits that can be used to purchase groceries for themselves and their family members. In those sixty years, the federal government and state agencies have worked together to build a robust process for ensuring that only eligible individuals receive benefits. In fact, the USDA itself has described SNAP as having “one of the most rigorous quality control systems in the federal government.” Those systems do not require, and have never required, that states turn over sensitive, personally identifying information about millions of Americans without any meaningful restrictions on how that information is used or shared with other agencies.
Yet in May 2025, USDA made an unprecedented demand that states turn over massive amounts of personal information on all SNAP applicants and recipients, including social security numbers and home addresses, dating back five years. Even just one year’s worth of SNAP recipient data contains sensitive, personal identifying information on tens of millions of individuals –including one in six residents in Massachusetts. The federal government’s stated justifications for its unprecedented data demands, to “prevent fraud and abuse,” are directly contradicted by their own findings.
USDA’s demand is part of a coordinated effort by the federal government to collect personal information on Americans from every possible source, to be used to advance the President’s agenda. Since President Trump re-entered the White House in January, public reports indicate that federal officials are amassing huge databases of personal information on Americans and using that data for undisclosed purposes, including immigration enforcement. The Department of Homeland Security is also attempting to obtain troves of personal information from both the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Health and Human Services Agency, including private medical information and other personal details on Medicaid recipients, which Massachusetts has already challenged in court. USDA’s attempts to collect data from states about SNAP applicants and recipients appear to be the next step in this campaign.
USDA’s actions are unprecedented, threaten the privacy of millions of families, and ignore long-standing restrictions on the use and redisclosure of SNAP data. Both federal and state law prohibit Massachusetts from disclosing personally identifying SNAP data unless strictly necessary for the administration of the program, or other limited circumstances exist. Those circumstances do not exist here.
In today’s lawsuit, AG Campbell and the coalition argue that these demands violate multiple federal privacy laws; fail to meet the public comment requirements for this type of action; exceed USDA’s statutory authority; and violate the Spending Clause. The coalition asks that the District Court declare the Trump Administration’s demands unlawful and block the Trump Administration from conditioning receipt of SNAP funding on states’ compliance with these unlawful demands.
Joining AG Campbell in filing this lawsuit are the attorneys general of California, New York, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington, and Wisconsin, as well as the state of Kentucky.
A copy of the lawsuit is available here.
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