The U.S. economy is “terrible” and the White House is lying about it, according to Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump.
In a collegial interview with former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin on Friday, Trump told the one-time vice presidential candidate that “we have to make a lot of improvement,” claiming “the White House is not truthful” about the state of the country’s economy.
WATCH: Trump slams Rick Perry and Rand Paul
“Our current tax code is a joke,” Palin said. What would Trump do about it? Simplify it, of course, and reduce taxes. How? Palin didn’t ask and Trump certainly didn’t offer up any solutions — a recurring theme of Trump’s candidacy, according to some critics.
He did say, however, that there are too many “hedge fund guys making a fortune” and not paying their fair share in taxes to the federal government — a position unlikely to win the favor of small-government conservatives like GOP rivals Ted Cruz and Jeb Bush, whom Palin also interviewed Friday on her show “On Point with Sarah Palin.”
The right-wing love-fest signaled that Palin’s brand of unfiltered, unapologetic conservatism is again taking hold of the Republican Party, driven in part by Trump’s own brash style and a sweeping dissatisfaction with Washington across America.
Framing himself as a champion of working Americans, the billionaire real estate mogul said, “The country was based on the middle class … and they are being treated horribly.”
The same goes for veterans, who Trump said “have been treated terribly.”
“If I win … believe me, the vets will be taken care of.”









