Government shutdown ‘disastrous’ for veterans: Lawmakers, advocatesReporting from The Hill Veterans Voices Summit
Washington, D.C.,
November 6, 2025
Rep. Chrissy Houlahan (D-Pa.) and Mike Viqueira, NewsNation Washington Bureau Chief, discuss serving after service during The Hill's Veterans Voices Summit on Thursday, November 6, 2025.
Published by The Hill
Written by Surina Venkat Click here to watch full speakers' panels at The Hill Veterans Voices Summit Lawmakers and advocates characterized the government shutdown and the partisan politics fueling it as “disastrous” for retired and active-duty service members, who they said rely on food assistance and medical coverage provisions at risk amid the funding lapse. “This shutdown is really disastrous for our current military, and it’s not just because of the financial worry, which is very high,” Kathy Roth-Douquet, co-founder and CEO of Blue Star Families, told NewsNation’s Washington bureau chief Mike Viqueira on Thursday at The Hill’s “Veteran Voices Summit.” Though veterans’ issues enjoy broad bipartisan support, lawmakers and advocates said the Trump administration’s funding cuts and the shutdown disproportionately impacted service members. “We can’t keep shooting ourselves in the foot on this kind of stuff,” said Rep. Chrissy Houlahan (D-Pa.), a former Air Force officer. “We have to take care of our veterans and cannot be partisan about this.” About 1.2 million veterans in the U.S. live in households that participate in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), which provides food assistance to low-income families. SNAP’s funding was set to lapse Nov. 1, though lawmakers introduced legislation to try to fund the program amid the government shutdown. Following a federal judge’s ruling, the administration said it would partially fund the program in November. Roth-Douquet said the number of military members turning to food banks during the shutdown was “surging” because many members have spouses who are federal government workers — meaning their household income was “down one paycheck” during the shutdown. “But more importantly, we are so vital in the military to our civilian leadership, and when our civilian leadership doesn’t seem like they can do their basic job, it undermines our confidence in serving,” she said. She said some veterans no longer wanted to recommend military service to others due to the political tumult. Virginia Burger, a senior defense policy analyst for the Project on Government Oversight and a former Marine Corps member, said the “politicization of the military” through measures such as the federal government’s deployment of the National Guard in recent months has affected veterans’ morale. “If the military loses credibility, that hurts veterans, right?” Burger said. “It hurts our own ability, if the reputation of the organization we are associated with is discolored, it’s going to have a negative impact on us.” Abraham Kamarck, CEO of True Made Foods, also pointed to how more general policies from the administration were affecting veterans. Kamarck, a Navy veteran, said that economic upheaval caused by President Trump’s tariffs caused him to raise his products’ prices twice this year.
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