Trump's inflation flippancy gifts Dems ready-made midterm ads

Axios Axios

President Trump has been on a roll of rhetorical missteps that could come back to bite https://www.axios.com/2026/05/23/trump-economy-republicans" target="_blank">Republicans in the midterms.

Why it matters: Trump has served up a platter of ready-made campaign ads to Democrats, suggesting he's fine with rising prices and unconcerned about Americans' financial struggles.


Driving the news: Trump delivered three eye-popping quotes in the span of a month:

The big picture: Michael Kinsley famously https://newrepublic.com/article/133021/republicans-keep-committing-kinsley-gaffe" target="_blank">defined a gaffe as "when a politician tells the truth — some obvious truth he isn't supposed to say."

  • Trump's gaffes revealed something different: not an inconvenient truth, but the truth as he wishes it to be.

Zoom in: The first came in mid-May, when Trump said, "I don't think about Americans' financial situation." His point was that he wouldn't let domestic financial pain prevent him from stopping Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.

But that nuance is likely to be lost in the heat of campaign season.

  • "The president could have chosen different words, but this is what he thinks," a Trump adviser told Axios at the time.

    Two days later, Trump https://www.foxnews.com/video/6395736085112" target="_blank">told Fox News it was "a perfect statement.

    I'd make it again."

  • Trump's "I don't care about the midterms" remark came as he argued against letting Iran exploit the U.S. political calendar as leverage in the war.
  • In the Oval Office Wednesday, Trump was asked about inflation hitting a three-year high. "You know what I really love?

    I love the inflation," he https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/10/trump-inflation-cpi-iran-oil.html" target="_blank">said, before predicting that prices would drop "like a rock" once the war in Iran is over.

Between the lines: Trump's remarks — and his refusal to walk them back — show how consumed he is with winning the war, no matter the political cost to congressional Republicans.

  • The party has pleaded for him to turn his attention to cost-of-living issues, but Trump has made clear that Iran is his priority.

The context: Compounding the problem for Republicans, Trump has pushed for hundreds of millions of dollars for a White House ballroom and $1.8 billion for an "anti-weaponization" fund that could've benefited people who participated in the Jan. 6 attacks.

  • The bipartisan pushback to both ideas revealed how hard they were for Republicans to defend.

By the numbers: Just 29% of Americans approve of Trump's handling of the economy, while 63% disapprove — his worst numbers on the issue in either term, according to an https://yougov.com/en-us/articles/54935-record-63-percent-americans-disapprove-donald-trump-handling-economy-june-5-8-2026-economist-yougov-poll" target="_blank">Economist/YouGov poll out this week.

The other side: Trump told the https://nypost.com/2026/06/10/us-news/trump-brushes-off-major-inflation-spike-as-consumer-prices-skyrocket-i-love-the-inflation/" target="_blank">New York Post on Wednesday that he meant to say that he loved that inflation wasn't higher.

  • "Despite the fact that we're in a war, the numbers are much lower than anticipated, and when we're out of that war, the numbers will be at lower numbers than they were even before it started," he said.
  • "Delivering economic relief for the American people has been a Day One priority for the Trump administration," White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement, pointing to tax cuts and drug pricing deals.

The bottom line: Congressional Republicans are focused on winning an election.

Trump is focused on winning a war.

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