Americans received some encouraging economic news yesterday, with new data showing economic growth bouncing back over the summer. After disappointing data from the first part of the year, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported that the GDP grew at a 2.6% annualized rate, exceeding expectations.
Several Republican leaders responded to the good news by pretending not to notice it, but HuffPost noted that some prominent GOP lawmakers took the time to downplay the data.
Economists said the third-quarter GDP report showed an overall healthy economy, with strong consumer spending and business investment, along with hints of slowing inflation. Republicans still pooh-poohed it. Rep. Kevin Brady (R-Texas), the top Republican on the Ways and Means Committee, claimed Thursday that “economists have dumbed down economic projections to reflect [Biden’s] struggling policies.”
The Texas Republican added that the 2.6% figure represented “ghost growth,” whatever that means. Rep. Jason Smith, the top Republican on the House Budget Committee, was similarly unimpressed with the encouraging economic report.
I wonder if they appreciate the degree to which they were contradicting Donald Trump.
Five years ago, Trump’s Commerce Department released a similar GDP report, and it showed — you guessed it — 2.6% quarterly economic growth. (As it turns out, that 2.6% figure was a preliminary estimate that was later revised down to 2%, but let’s put that aside for now.)
The then-president eagerly boasted about the data, telling reporters, “2.6 is a number that nobody thought they’d see for a long period of time.” The Republican complained that news organizations hadn’t talked enough about it, adding, “2.6 is an unbelievable number.”
As a factual matter, the chest-thumping was misguided. Given the economic circumstances that existed partway through 2017, GDP growth of 2.6% was largely unremarkable and evidence of a generally healthy economy.
But at the time, Trump wouldn’t let this go. A few days after celebrating routine news as “unbelievable,” he held a rally in West Virginia, and continued to tout the data. “Economic growth has surged to 2.6% nationwide,” the Republican bragged, as if 2.6% quarterly growth was truly amazing. “You have to understand what that means: Nobody thought that number was going to happen.”









