Trump hasn’t brought most prices down. That’s hurting him politically
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ President Trump made dozens of promises when he campaigned to retake the White House last year, from boosting economic growth to banning transgender athletes from girlsβ sports.
But one pledge stood out as the most important in many votersβ eyes: Trump said he would not only bring inflation under control, but push grocery and energy prices back down.
βStarting the day I take the oath of office, I will rapidly drive prices down, and we will make America affordable again,β he said in 2024. βYour prices are going to come tumbling down, your gasoline is going to come tumbling down, and your heating bills and cooling bills are going to be coming down.β
He hasnβt delivered. Gasoline and eggs are cheaper than they were a year ago, but most other prices are still rising, including groceries and electricity. The Labor Department estimated Thursday that inflation is running at 2.7%, only a little better than the 3% Trump inherited from Joe Biden; electricity was up 6.9%.
And that has given the president a major political problem: Many of the voters who backed him last year are losing faith.
βI voted for Trump in 2024 because he was promising America first β¦ and he was promising a better economy,β Ebyad, a nurse in Texas, said on a Focus Group podcast hosted by Bulwark publisher Sarah Longwell. βIt feels like all those promises have been broken.β
Since Inauguration Day, the presidentβs job approval has declined from 52% to 43% in the polling average calculated by statistician Nate Silver. Approval for Trumpβs performance on the economy, once one of his strongest points, has sunk even lower to 39%.
Thatβs dangerous territory for a president who hopes to help his party keep its narrow majority in elections for the House of Representatives next year.
To Republican pollsters and strategists, the reasons for Trumpβs slump are clear: He overpromised last year and heβs under-performing now.
βThe most important reasons he won in 2024 were his promises to bring inflation down and juice the economy,β Republican pollster Whit Ayres said. βThatβs the reason he won so many voters who traditionally had supported Democrats, including Hispanics. β¦ But he hasnβt been able to deliver. Inflation has moderated, but it hasnβt gone backward.β
Last week, after deriding complaints about affordability as βa Democrat hoax,β Trump belatedly launched a campaign to convince voters that heβs at work fixing the problem.
But at his first stop, a rally in Pennsylvania, he continued arguing that the economy is already in great shape.
βOur prices are coming down tremendously,β he insisted.
βYouβre doing better than youβve ever done,β he said, implicitly dismissing votersβ concerns.
He urged families to cope with high tariffs by cutting back: βYou know, you can give up certain products,β he said. βYou donβt need 37 dolls for your daughter. Two or three is nice, but you donβt need 37 dolls.β
Earlier, in an interview with Politico, Trump was asked what grade he would give the economy. βA-plus-plus-plus-plus-plus,β he said.
On Wednesday, the president took another swing at the issue in a nationally televised speech, but his message was basically the same.
βOne year ago, our country was dead. We were absolutely dead,β he said. βNow weβre the hottest country anywhere in the world. β¦ Inflation is stopped, wages are up, prices are down.β
Republican pollster David Winston, who has advised GOP members of Congress, said the president has more work to do to win back voters who supported him in 2024 but are now disenchanted.
βWhen families are paying the price for hamburger that they used to pay for steak, thereβs a problem, and thereβs no sugarcoating it,β he said. βThe presidentβs statements that βwe have no inflationβ and βour groceries are downβ have flown in the face of votersβ reality.β
Another problem for Trump, pollsters said, is that many voters believe his tariffs are pushing prices higher β making the president part of the problem, not part of the solution. A YouGov poll in November found that 77% of voters believe tariffs contribute to inflationary pressures.
Trumpβs popularity hasnβt dropped through the floor; he still has the allegiance of his fiercely loyal base. βHe is at his lowest point of his second term so far, but he is well within the range of his job approval in the first term,β Ayres noted.
Still, he has lost significant chunks of his support among independent voters, young people and Latinos, three of the βswing voterβ groups who put him over the top in 2024.
Inflation isnβt the only issue that has dented his standing.
He promised to lead the economy into βa golden age,β but growth has been uneven. Unemployment rose in November to 4.6%, the highest level in more than four years.
He promised massive tax cuts for the middle class, but most voters say they donβt believe his tax cut bill brought them any benefit. βItβs hard to convince people that they got a tax break when nobodyβs tax rates were actually cut,β Ayres noted.
He kept his promise to launch the largest deportation campaign in U.S. history β but many voters complain that he has broken his promise to focus on violent criminals. In Silverβs average, approval of his immigration policies dropped from 52% in January to 45% now.
A Pew Research Center survey in October found that 53% of adults, including 71% of Latinos, think the administration has ordered too many deportations. However, most voters approve of Trumpβs measures on border security.
Republican pollsters and strategists say they believe Trump can reverse his downward momentum before Novemberβs congressional election, but it may not be easy.
βYou look at what voters care about most, and you offer policies to address those issues,β GOP strategist Alex Conant suggested. βThat starts with prices. So you talk about permitting reform, energy prices, AI [artificial intelligence] β¦ and legislation to address healthcare, housing and tax cuts. You could call it the Affordability Act.β
βA laser focus on the economy and the cost of living is job one,β GOP pollster Winston said. βHis policies on regulation, energy and taxes should have a positive impact, but the White House needs to emphasize them on a more consistent basis.β
βPeople voted for change in 2024,β he warned. βIf they donβt get it β if inflation doesnβt begin to recede β they may vote for change again in 2026.β