The U.S. government has caused massive food waste during
President Donald Trump’s second term. Policies such as immigration raids,
tariff changes and temporary and permanent
cuts to food assistance programs have left farmers short of workers
and money, food rotting in fields and warehouses, and millions of Americans
hungry. And that doesn’t even include the administration’s actual destruction
of edible food.
The U.S. government estimates that more
than 47 million people in America don’t have enough food to eat – even
with federal and state governments spending hundreds
of billions of dollars a year on programs to help them.
Yet, huge amounts of food – on average in the U.S., as
much as 40% of it – rots before being eaten. That amount is equivalent to 120
billion meals a year: more than twice as many meals as would be needed to
feed those 47 million hungry Americans three times a day for an entire year.
This colossal waste has enormous economic costs and
renders useless all the water
and resources used to grow the food. In addition, as it rots, the
wasted food emits in the U.S. alone over 4 million metric tons of methane –
a heat-trapping greenhouse gas.
As a scholar of wasted food,
I have watched this problem worsen since Trump began his second term in January
2025. Despite this administration’s claim of streamlining the government
to make
its operations more efficient, a range of recent federal policies have, in
fact, exacerbated food wastage.
A farmworker raises her hands as armed immigration agents
approach during a raid on a California farm in July 2025. Blake
Fagan/AFP via Getty Images
Immigration policy
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The Trump administration’s widespread efforts to arrest and
deport immigrants have sent Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the
Border Patrol and other agencies into hundreds of agricultural fields, meat
processing plants and food production and distribution sites. Supported
by billions
of taxpayer dollars, they have arrested thousands of food workers and
farmworkers – with
lethal consequences at times.
Dozens
of raids have not only violated immigrants’ human rights and torn
families apart: They have jeopardized the national food supply. Farmworkers
already work physically
hard jobs for low wages. In legitimate
fear for their lives and liberty, reports indicate that in some places
70% of people harvesting, processing and distributing food stopped
showing up to work by mid-2025.
News reports have identified many instances where crops
have been left to rot in abandoned
fields. Even the U.S. Department of Labor declared in October 2025 that
aggressive farm raids drive farmworkers into hiding, leave substantial amounts
of food unharvested and thus pose a “risk
of supply shock-induced food shortages.”
Food specially formulated to feed starving children is
marked for disposal in a U.S. government warehouse in July 2025. Stephen
B. Morton for The Washington Post via Getty Images
Foreign aid cuts
When the Trump administration all but shut down the U.S.
Agency for International Development in early 2025, the agency had 500
tons of ready-to-eat, high-energy biscuits worth
US$800,000, stored to distribute to starving people around the world who
had been displaced by violence or natural disasters. With no staff to
distribute the biscuits, they expired while sitting in a warehouse in Dubai.
Incinerating the out-of-date biscuits reportedly cost an additional $125,000. An additional 70,000 tons of USAID food aid may also have been destroyed.
Tariffs
In the late 20th century, as globalized trade patterns
grew, U.S. farmers struggled with agricultural prices below
their production costs. Yet tariffs in the first Trump administration did
not protect small farms.
And the tariffs imposed in early 2025, after Trump
regained the White House, severed
U.S. soybean trade with China for months. Meanwhile, there’s nowhere
to store the mountains of soybeans. An October 2025 agreement may resume
some activity, but at lower
price levels and a slower pace than before, as China looks to Brazil
and Argentina to meet its vast
demand.
Though the soybeans were intended to feed the Chinese pig
industry, not humans, the specter
of waste looms both in terms of the potential spoilage of soybeans and
the actual human food that could have been grown in their place.
Mature soybeans sit unharvested in an Indiana field in
October 2025. Jeremy
Hogan/Getty Images
Other efforts lead to more waste
Since taking office, the second Trump administration has
taken many steps aimed at efficiency that actually boosted food waste.
Mass firings
of food safety personnel risks even more outbreaks of foodborne
diseases, tainted
imports, and agricultural pathogens – which can erupt into crises requiring
mass destruction, for instance, of nearly
35,000 turkeys with bird flu in Utah.
In addition, the administration canceled a popular
program that helped
schools and food banks buy food from local farmers, though many of the
crops had already been planted when the cancellation announcement was made.
That food had to find new buyers or risk being wasted, too. And the farmers
were unable
to count on a key revenue source to keep their farms afloat.
Also, the administration slashed funding for the Federal
Emergency Management Agency that helped food producers, restaurants and
households recover from disasters – including restoring power to food-storage
refrigeration.
The fall 2025 government shutdown left the government’s
major food aid program, SNAP, in limbo for weeks, derailing
communities’ ability to meet their basic needs. Grocers, who benefit
substantially from SNAP funds, announced discounts for SNAP recipients
– to help them afford food and to keep food supplies moving before they rotted.
The Department of Agriculture ordered them not to, saying SNAP
customers must pay the same prices as other customers.
Food waste did not start with the Trump administration.
But the administration’s policies – though they claim to be seeking efficiency
– have compounded voluminous waste at a time of growing need. This
Thanksgiving, think about wasted food – as a problem, and as a symptom of
larger problems.
Tevis
Garrett Graddy-Lovelace, Provost Associate Professor of Environment,
Development and Health, American University School of International Service
American University School of International Service
master’s student Laurel Levin contributed
to the writing of this article.

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