Joe Biden’s economy is hitting the middle class challenging, and now middle-class American mothers – a constituency that traditionally leans a little to the left and that Democrats take for granted – blame Joe Biden’s policies for their difficulties in making ends meet.
The Kitchen table economy of American households have become a battleground for frustrated mothers struggling with the realities of the Biden administration’s policies.
“It’s bad. Corner shops are closing at an alarming rate. [It takes] two to three jobs per person just to make ends meet,” Kristina Tullos, a worried mother from Hawaii, said on Tuesday at “Fox & Friends first.”
Tullos was one of three mothers who spoke with co-host Carley Shimkus about their financial frustrations under the current administration.
Joe Biden’s economic policies have been disastrous and there are no signs of improvement, no matter how challenging Joe’s advisers try to deny it. More and more Americans are looking back at the previous administration with nostalgia.
Quisha King, entrepreneur, podcast host and single mother, compared her life under the Trump administration to her current one, focusing on the struggle to cover the costs of daily necessities.
“It’s so paralyzing,” she said. “I’m so ready to vote for change, [to] Vote for Donald Trump to get rid of Bidenomics forever.
“You’re afraid to even check your bank account because you go to the grocery store and you spend so much on gas and everyday things and the kids need things,” she continued. “It’s becoming such a substantial fight, and I’m ready for Bidenomics to be over. I’m so tired of him trying to pretend that Americans aren’t struggling.”
Quisha King seems lots of company.
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Bidenflation, Bidenomics – whatever you call it, it still hits American families challenging
But for the Trump campaign and Republicans in general, this is a cautionary tale. It won’t be enough to just point fingers at Biden’s economy and make well-deserved remarks about how much it stinks. They need to bring their own positive arguments to the discussion.
What should that alternative be? Freedom, of course. Promise deregulation. Promise lower tax rates. Promise smaller government. Promise that people can keep more of what they earn. Promise to make it harder for looters and freeloaders to roll in place. And while you’re at it, talk about bringing order back to our major cities and maybe abolishing some unconstitutional imperial agencies. Promise to unleash our energy sector, make us more energy independent again, and bring down fuel prices – as well as the prices of everything else.
Then deliver. Talk is economical. Action is priceless. Let’s assume that the election goes as happily as we can imagine, and that President Trump is sworn in and moves into the White House in January 2025, knowing that he will be working in Congress with a comfortable Republican majority in the House and Senate.
In this scenario, the President-elect and Congressional leaders should have spent most of the damn time between Election Day and the convening of the novel Congress drafting bills, drafting them, and getting them ready for a vote, and then on the first day of the novel Congress, all the Speaker of the House should have to do is slam the gavel on the floor and yell “GO!”
We’ve seen Biden’s method. It doesn’t work. The Republicans are in a forceful position on this issue; they need to exploit it.
Someone once said the apt phrase: “It’s the economy, stupid.”

