AG Neronha Sues Trump Admin Over Illegal USDA Funding Conditions
Summary
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter F. Neronha, joined by 21 other state AGs, has filed a lawsuit against the Trump Administration challenging new USDA funding conditions related to immigration, diversity, equity, and inclusion. The lawsuit argues these conditions are unconstitutional, unlawful, and unrelated to USDA program purposes, seeking to block their imposition.
What changed
Attorney General Neronha, leading a coalition of 21 state attorneys general, has filed a lawsuit against the Trump Administration challenging new funding conditions imposed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) effective December 31, 2025. The lawsuit asserts that these conditions, which require states to comply with policies on gender identity, diversity, immigration, and athletic opportunities, are unconstitutional, unlawful, arbitrary, capricious, and beyond USDA's statutory authority. The coalition argues these conditions are unrelated to the purpose of USDA funding and were imposed without clear notice, violating the Spending Clause and the Administrative Procedure Act.
The practical implications for regulated entities are significant, particularly for those relying on USDA funding for critical programs such as the school lunch program, WIC, SNAP, and TEFAP. The lawsuit seeks to block the USDA from enforcing these conditions, which if upheld, could lead to severe disruptions in essential services, impacting millions of Americans struggling with food insecurity. States are urged to review their current agreements and be prepared for potential legal challenges or the need to comply with revised, lawful funding conditions if the lawsuit is unsuccessful.
What to do next
- Review current USDA funding agreements for compliance with new conditions.
- Assess potential impacts of funding condition changes on program delivery.
- Consult legal counsel regarding challenges to the conditions.
Penalties
The lawsuit asserts that the USDA has threatened harsh penalties if states do not comply with the new funding conditions.
Source document (simplified)
Attorney General Neronha, coalition sue Trump Administration for placing illegal conditions on billions in critical USDA funding
Published on Monday, March 23, 2026
Attorney General Peter F. Neronha today joined a coalition of 21 attorneys general in suing the Trump Administration over its unconstitutional and unlawful attempt to impose conditions on U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) programs, grants, cooperative agreements, and mutual interest agreements.
In their lawsuit, the coalition asserts that USDA has threatened harsh penalties if states do not comply with the agency’s vague and expansive funding conditions relating to immigration, diversity, equity and inclusion, and gender identity, which are unrelated to the purpose of USDA funding. The lawsuit asks the court to block USDA from imposing these illegal funding conditions, including on critical USDA programs such as the school lunch program; Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC); the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP); The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP); and the Volunteer Fire Capacity Program.
“This President would rather Americans go hungry than disagree with him politically,” said Attorney General Neronha. “As this Administration has attempted to do in the recent past, and failed, they are once again trying to make federal funding for essential services contingent on political capitulation. This was plainly illegal when they tried to do it with funding for transportation, emergency preparedness, and other essential areas, and it is plainly illegal here. Millions upon millions of Americans struggle with food insecurity and rely on this funding to feed themselves and their families. They cannot and will not impose illegal conditions on this funding; we will make sure of it.”
Effective December 31, 2025, USDA adopted new funding conditions. The conditions require states to promise to comply with the Trump Administration’s policies related to gender identity, diversity, immigration and fair athletic opportunities for girls and women. However, as the attorneys general explain in their lawsuit, USDA does not fully identify or limit which policies the states must comply with, leaving states at the mercy of the administration for enforcement of the new conditions.
In their lawsuit, the coalition alleges that the Trump Administration has violated the Spending Clause by imposing coercive conditions without clear notice of its funding conditions. The lawsuit also alleges the Trump Administration violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) because conditions are the arbitrary and capricious, unconstitutional, contrary to law, and beyond USDA’s statutory authority.
USDA programs feed about 30 million children across the nation through the school lunch program, strengthen the American food ecosystem from farm to table, support national security through a robust and safe domestic agriculture community, fund university research to advance domestic food production, and save lives and infrastructure by funding firefighting programs.
In FY 2024 alone, the State of Rhode Island and its agencies received over $418 million in USDA funding, the vast majority of which went towards feeding Rhode Island’s most vulnerable populations. The State depends on USDA funding to feed its residents and run several critical programs, and even a temporary loss of USDA funding could quickly lead to food insecurity, financial stress, unemployment, and poor student outcomes, among other negative impacts.
Joining Attorney General Neronha in filing the lawsuit are the attorneys general of California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.
Date
Mon, 03/23/2026 - 16:01
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