A Rapper Takes Aim at Trump's Base
Cardi B didn't mince words in a recent Instagram Live session, directing sharp criticism at poor voters who believed President Donald Trump would improve their financial situation. The 33-year-old rapper argued that Trump's policies have consistently favored the wealthy while ignoring low-income Americans, suggesting that even millionaires are considered "poor" by his standards.
Her comments arrived at an awkward moment: millions of Americans are losing access to food assistance as the federal government grinds through a shutdown and a messy legal fight over the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
Food Stamps Cut in Half as Shutdown Drags On
Here's where things get painful for families already struggling. Federal funding for SNAP remains in limbo as the shutdown continues. States received instructions to slash November SNAP benefits to 50%, affecting roughly 40 million Americans who depend on the program to feed their families. Food banks across the country are overwhelmed, struggling to fill the gap.
"To the families going through this, this is not a natural crisis," said Brian Greene, President of Houston Food Bank. "We as a society are doing this. We don't have to be doing this. I'm sorry you're going through that."
The legal drama adds another layer of chaos. A federal judge in Rhode Island ordered the Trump administration on Nov. 6 to fully fund November SNAP benefits. Some states managed to issue at least partial payments before the ruling faced pushback, but the administration appealed immediately. The Supreme Court then issued an emergency stay blocking full disbursements and kicked the case back to a lower court.
Following the Supreme Court's emergency stay, the U.S. Department of Agriculture instructed states to "immediately undo" any steps taken to distribute full November benefits. The warning was stark: failure to comply could result in canceled federal funding or liability for overpayments.
A lower court held a hearing on the case Monday. On Tuesday, the Supreme Court extended the stay on SNAP benefit payments until late Thursday.
Some governors are digging in their heels. Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey and Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers both announced they won't claw back funds from residents who already received them.
Cardi B's Political Journey
Cardi B's political evolution has been anything but straightforward. Back in May 2024, she told Rolling Stone she planned to sit out the presidential election entirely, fed up with both parties. "I don't f**k with both of y'all n**gas," she said, referring to former President Joe Biden and Trump.
Despite viewing Trump as a major threat, Cardi B expressed deep disappointment with Biden's leadership, pointing to rising living costs, stagnant wages, and what she described as betrayal in how the government handled domestic and foreign issues.
But she changed course. Cardi B ultimately endorsed former Vice President Kamala Harris, appearing alongside her at a Milwaukee rally before the election. After Harris lost, the rapper posted an Instagram letter in November thanking her for inspiring "my daughters and women across the country that anything is possible."
Now, as the food stamp crisis intensifies, Cardi B is back in the political conversation, calling out Trump supporters who she believes voted against their own economic interests. Whether her message resonates with those voters remains to be seen, but the timing underscores a harsh reality: political promises and policy outcomes don't always align, and it's often the most vulnerable Americans who feel the gap most acutely.