President Donald Trump is facing a familiar problem: He’s trying to convince Americans the economy is better than they think it is.
It didn’t work for Joe Biden. And after last week’s electoral drubbing — driven in large part by voters’ concerns about the high cost of living — Republicans throughout the country are increasingly convinced it’s not working for Trump, either.
Among White House aides, the election results were accepted as a bracing dose of reality, prompting meetings on how to refocus the White House’s message on Americans’ economic anxieties. And there is mounting frustration among some in the administration who view Trump’s focus on international relations — and his public pursuit of a Nobel Peace Prize — as a distraction from the economy-centric messaging that delivered him a second term.
“I predicted this,” one White House official told MSNBC, granted anonymity to speak candidly about the election results. “The president needs to focus on domestic issues versus his foreign policy legacy.”
Since last Tuesday, the White House has held meetings where talking points centered on affordability have been discussed.
“Tuesday’s election results definitely have heightened the desire to start talking about this more and talk about it now,” a second White House official told MSNBC. “The results highlighted what we’ve known to be true for a while, and a lot of people have been saying — behind the scenes — here and now, we’re taking that message more forcefully to the public.”
But there’s at least one primary factor complicating that messaging pivot: Trump himself.
While his staff works to refocus the White House message on affordability, Trump ended the week by dismissing economic concerns, blaming them on negative media coverage and insisting that prices are falling when data shows the opposite.
On Wednesday, the bruise of the election still fresh, Trump flew to and from Miami. Recapturing “cost of living” as a winning issue for Republicans was top of mind for the president while aboard Air Force One, the second White House official told MSNBC.
Within days, Trump seemed more focused on casting blame for “affordability” concerns while also trying to insist that they weren’t valid.
“The reason I don’t want to talk about affordability is because everybody knows that it’s far less expensive under Trump than it was under sleepy Joe Biden,” the president said on Friday during an open-to-press meeting with Hungarian President Viktor Orbán. He accused Democrats of “hijacking” the issue, and asked White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt to interject and suggest that news outlets have failed to cover the issue accurately.
“Affordability is what the American people elected this president to do, and he is doing it — and you guys refuse to cover it,” Leavitt said.









