President Donald Trump mounted a vigorous defense of his economic stewardship on Friday, arguing that robust growth and cooling inflation show his policies are working even as a string of recent Democratic wins signaled voter frustration over the cost of living.
Speaking after the results, Trump pointed to strong GDP prints, low unemployment, and stock market gains as evidence that “the fundamentals are solid.” He cast energy expansion, deregulation and stricter spending discipline as keys to lowering costs, and said his administration is “pushing hard” to ease supply bottlenecks and boost housing construction.
The remarks come as Democrats have leaned into pocketbook messaging following off-year victories they say reflect enduring unease over grocery, gas and housing prices. While headline inflation has eased from its peak, prices remain well above pre-pandemic levels—fueling a perception gap the White House has struggled to close.
Republicans counter that real wage growth has turned positive and that tighter border controls, expanded domestic energy output and pro-business tax policy will further temper inflation while sustaining job creation. Democrats argue that families still feel squeezed by rent and food costs and warn that GOP proposals on health care and tariffs could add to household expenses.
Economists note that the Federal Reserve’s path—how long rates stay elevated and how quickly they come down—will heavily influence inflation and growth into 2026. In the near term, both parties are vying to convince skeptics: Democrats that relief will be felt at the checkout line, and Republicans that recent gains aren’t a blip but a trend. With voters signaling price fatigue, the battle over who owns the economy’s narrative is intensifying.



















