Although President Donald Trump remains fond of blaming Joe Biden for many of America’s financial hardships, he has also insisted — sometimes in the same breath — that the economy is thriving, recently giving the nation’s finances an “A+++++.”
But ask Republicans in Congress whose economy it actually is, as MS NOW did in recent days, and the answers grow noticeably murkier — and more cautious — reflecting both political calculation and lingering uncertainty about America’s financial reality.
For many Republicans, the response was nakedly political: The good parts belong to Trump; the bad parts still belong to Biden.
“It depends on what part of the economy,” Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., said. He said lower gas prices are a bright spot, but argued there are still regulations left to undo from the Biden years.
Other Republicans looked to downplay how much of the economy belongs to the current president, despite Trump’s insistence that, “starting on Day One, we will end inflation and make America affordable again.”
Rep. Byron Donalds, R-Fla., told MS NOW that “moving economies is like moving battleships.”
“That’s just the way it is,” Donalds continued. “It takes a lot of work to get an economy back on the right footing. We’re already starting to see some of the early signs of this.”
“It takes a while to undo the damage,” Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, said.
“I don’t know whose economy it is,” Roy said. “What I know is we had massive spending during COVID. We had massive inflationary spending. We had massive regulations, and we’re unwinding a lot of that.”
Some Republicans were clear that nearly a year into Trump’s presidency, it’s his economy.
Asked at what point it becomes the Trump economy, Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, said, “It is now.”
But Republicans still sought to caveat those types of answers by blaming Biden for things like inflation.
“The fact is that 40-year high inflation has still caused abruptly a 20% decrease in the standard of living for most Americans,” Cornyn said. “So we’re having to try to clean up after that mess.”
(The inflation rate had already fallen to roughly 3% when Biden left office, after peaking at 9% in 2022.)
Still, time and again, when MS NOW asked Republicans if it was Trump’s economy, they gave excuses as to why Americans may still be struggling as the calendar approaches 2026. In the words of Sen. Jim Justice, R-W.V., Trump is trying to “drag” America “out of the Biden economy.”
Justice cautioned it’s going to take a “little while” to accomplish such a reset — saying Trump is trying to bring manufacturing “back to America.”
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., said the president “gets an A for his efforts.”
And Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., one of the president’s top allies on Capitol Hill, said he believes we are in the Trump economy: “All the trend lines are going in the right direction.”
He cited lower gas prices and mortgage rates.
Asked when Trump’s economy begins, Rep. Jeff Van Drew, R-N.J., said: “Next year.”
To be sure, some Republicans wish the president would just own the current state of things and instead focus on what he’s doing to improve the economic outlook.
Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., who is set to retire at the end of this term, invoked his time as speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives between 2011 and 2015.
“I was about three months into my role as speaker — coming in in the financial crisis — and I had a reporter ask me, Do I own the economy? And I said, ‘I absolutely do,’” Tillis said.
His messaging suggestion to President Trump was that it’s better just to say “we ran to fix the problem that Biden created.”
“It is a problem,” Tillis said. “We own the solution. Move on.”
As much as Trump continues to take victory laps on the economy, he’s also fond of blaming Biden.









