Trump digs deeper on downplaying Americans’ wartime financial burdens
Confronted with polls showing broad opposition to his ballroom vanity project and concerns about his weird priorities, Donald Trump apparently thought it would be a good idea to summon White House reporters to look at the construction underway where the East Wing once stood.
Apparently indifferent to the political toxicity surrounding it, the president went on at great length about his enthusiasm for the project and again endorsed a Republican effort to secure $1 billion in public funds for “security” measures related to the controversial endeavor.
But as the Q&A turned to Americans’ wartime economic hardships, Trump used a word that stood out.
“This is peanuts,” the president said, in apparent reference to gas prices. “And I appreciate everybody putting up with it for a little while. It won’t be much longer. … What I think about is you can’t let Iran have a nuclear weapon.”
Of course, given that he was speaking in front of his ballroom construction, alongside pictures of the ballroom, after speaking excitedly about the ballroom, Iran’s nonexistent nuclear weapons are clearly not the only thing he’s “thinking about.”
But given the broader context, it was his “peanuts” line that seemed especially tone-deaf. It was, after all, just last week when Trump also said, when asked about Americans’ wartime financial difficulties, “I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation. I don’t think about anybody.”
Offered an opportunity to walk back the rhetoric, the president said his instantly notorious phrases were “perfect.”
The comments came the same week that he claimed he had successfully lowered prices “incredibly” (that hasn’t happened), which followed similar claims about a “very substantial” drop in gas prices (that also hasn’t happened).
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