Trump’s declaration that Democrats are using "affordability" as a scam might strike a chord politically, but economically it misses the mark. Inflation isn't a partisan trick—it's a monetary consequence. When government spending explodes, whether under Democrats or Republicans, inflation is the inevitable tax on everyone.
Both parties have fueled it. Trillions in COVID-era spending, followed by post-crisis stimulus, distorted demand and overwhelmed constrained supply chains. Prices rose, not because of a slogan, but because too much currency flooded the system.
No one in Washington gets a pass here. Democrats led the charge on stimulus, but Republicans signed the checks too. Printing money and handing it out like candy might feel compassionate, but it decouples productivity from consumption. That imbalance must eventually reconcile, and it did—with 9.1% inflation.
Instead of owning this, politicians now weaponize the aftermath for campaign talking points.
Trump's new tariffs have also played a quiet role in inflation’s resurgence. Import restrictions drive up input costs, which businesses pass on to consumers. That’s not speculation—it’s textbook economics.
While the intent may be to boost domestic industries, the reality is that tariffs protect inefficiency, restrict supply, and hurt the very working-class voters they claim to champion. It’s economic nationalism at the expense of affordability.
The idea that affordability can be legislated into existence is absurd. Markets determine prices based on supply and demand. When politicians talk about "making things affordable," they’re usually signaling price controls, subsidies, or regulations—all of which distort market function.
True affordability emerges when government interference is minimized, not when central planners dictate outcomes. The more Washington tries to "help," the worse things tend to get.
The Fox poll shows overwhelming discontent with the economy. That’s not a messaging problem—it’s a reality problem. When wages lag behind inflation, people feel squeezed. When savings evaporate under rising costs, it’s not because voters are uninformed—it’s because they’re being bled dry.
Washington doesn’t want to admit that the system it controls is the system that’s broken.
The solution isn’t complex—it’s just politically inconvenient:
Let the free market breathe, and prices will adjust. Suppress it with politics, and affordability becomes an illusion.
If you’re tired of being caught in the crossfire of bad policy and political posturing, it’s time to act. Download “Seven Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure” by Bill Brocius and get the tools to insulate your savings, assets, and freedom from the fallout. Click here to get your copy now.
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