Posted on 02/03/2026 9:28:27 AM PST by MtnClimber
When President Donald Trump took the oath of office for the second time in January, he did not inherit a roaring economy or a nation brimming with confidence. He inherited an economy weighed down by chronic inflation, high prices, and a deep sense of anxiety among working families who felt they were falling further behind every month.
But one year later, the outlook is far different. From day one onward, Trump has taken decisive action to stabilize and improve the economy. Challenges remain, and affordability is still a serious concern. But the results speak for themselves—and the best may still be to come.
Joe Biden’s Losing Hand
It is difficult to overstate just how dire an economic situation Trump inherited from his predecessor. The country was still reeling from the worst inflation crisis in 40 years, with inflation climbing past nine percent in 2022 and compounding to more than 20 percent over the course of Biden’s presidency.
For families living paycheck to paycheck, those numbers were not abstract. According to the Heritage Foundation, Biden-era inflation cost the typical American family roughly $36,000 in lost purchasing power.
This was not an accident or an act of nature. It was the predictable result of policy choices. Biden and congressional Democrats pushed through more than $7 trillion in new spending, exploding the deficit and pouring gasoline on an already overheated economy. Their socialist fantasies cost Americans dearly at the grocery store, the gas pump, and everywhere in between.
We will likely never even know the true scale of the devastation wrought by Biden-era policies because the data was obscured by a pattern of lies and manipulation.
The one data point the Biden administration kept pointing to as evidence of its “success” was the jobs report, which purported to show strong growth month-over-month. But from March 2023 to March 2024 alone, the Bureau of Labor Statistics overstated job growth by 818,000 jobs, more than 68,000 per month. That is roughly five times the agency’s normal margin of error.
This was not a rounding issue. It was a systemic effort to mislead the public.
Even where job growth did occur, Americans were left out. Under Biden, the majority of net job gains went to foreign-born workers, while American-born workers experienced negative job growth.
The real story of the Biden economy was a stagnant and uneven recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic that left millions worse off than before.
The contrast with Trump’s first term is striking. Even with the disruption of the pandemic, real wages grew by nearly seven percent during Trump’s first administration. Under Biden, real wages fell by 1.4 percent. That difference explains far more about voter frustration than any cable news talking point ever could.

Promises Made, Promises Kept
Voters made their frustrations with Biden’s failures clear in opinion polls and ultimately at the ballot box last year. Inflation, affordability, and the overall economy consistently ranked as the top issues. Trump ran on fixing what Biden broke, and he has wasted no time delivering.
The mess Trump inherited was severe, and no one pretends the work is finished. But the early returns are undeniable. Trump moved quickly to restore discipline and credibility, and inflation began falling almost immediately. During Trump’s second term so far, inflation has averaged 2.7 percent, a dramatic improvement from the Biden years.
That progress is showing up in paychecks. Under Biden, Americans lost roughly $3,000 in purchasing power on average. Throughout the first year of Trump’s second term, even after accounting for inflation, real wages have grown by more than $1,000.

Energy policy has been central to that turnaround. Upon taking office, Trump quickly signed a series of executive orders opening more federal lands to oil and gas exploration and cutting the regulatory red tape that had driven energy costs higher.
As a result, gas prices have fallen sharply. At the time this magazine went to print, the average price of a gallon of gas was below $3.00 in 36 states, below $2.75 in 20 states, and below $2.50 in five states. Under Biden, Americans endured record prices topping $5.00 per gallon in 2022.
Lower energy costs ripple through the entire economy. When fuel is cheaper, businesses can transport goods at lower cost, supply chains function more smoothly, and consumers have more discretionary income. That combination is a powerful engine for growth.
The labor market tells a similarly encouraging story. All job growth under Trump’s second term has gone to American-born workers. Between January and November 2025, 2.7 million native-born Americans gained employment while nearly one million foreign-born workers left the job market—many of whom were illegal aliens returning home.
Overall, the economy has added nearly 700,000 private-sector jobs under Trump. Meanwhile, employment in the federal bureaucracy has actually declined—a direct result of Trump’s commitment to cutting the waste, fraud, and abuse of taxpayer dollars within the federal government.
Trump has also secured roughly $8 trillion in foreign investment commitments, creating the foundation for tens of thousands of new jobs in the years ahead. His administration even established an “Investment Accelerator” to fast-track capital into American projects.
At the same time, targeted tariffs have generated new revenue for the Treasury and forced trading partners to renegotiate deals that better serve American workers. The trade deficit fell to a five-year low in 2025, and the trade gap with China narrowed to its second smallest level since 2009.
Crucially, Trump also secured the border, stopping the flow of illegal labor that had been suppressing wages and driving up housing costs.

More Relief Ahead
As meaningful as these improvements are, the most significant relief for families is still on the horizon. The One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB), which Trump signed into law in July, is by some measures the largest tax cut in American history. It locked in key provisions of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that were set to expire at the end of 2025, providing certainty to families and small businesses.
For seniors, the bill includes a provision that effectively eliminates federal income taxes on Social Security benefits for most recipients. In practical terms, this means that retirees below certain income thresholds will no longer see their earned benefits clawed back at tax time. For millions of seniors living on fixed incomes, that change alone is transformative.
The bill also delivers on two of Trump’s most popular promises: no federal tax on overtime pay and no federal tax on tips. For workers who rely on extra hours or gratuities to make ends meet, this means more money stays where it belongs, in their pockets.
The Council of Economic Advisors estimates that the OBBB could raise take-home pay by as much as $13,300 per family. The full effects will begin to be felt in 2026, with many Americans likely to see their largest tax refunds ever next year.
The economy often behaves like a snowball rolling downhill. Momentum matters. As families get more breathing room, they spend, save, and invest with greater confidence. That confidence feeds business expansion, hiring, and innovation. The cycle becomes self-reinforcing.

A Revival of the American Spirit
As intimated above, policy alone does not drive an economy—confidence plays a crucial role as well. One of Trump’s greatest strengths is his unwavering optimism about America’s future. He does not merely manage economic trends. He also shapes expectations.
The parallel to Ronald Reagan is hard to miss. Reagan inherited economic chaos from Jimmy Carter just as Trump inherited dysfunction from Biden. Both men understood that restoring growth required more than spreadsheets. It required persuading Americans that the bad times were ending and that better days were ahead.
Trump’s critics obsess over nitpicking statistics and spinning short-term data to sow doubt. But Trump understands that when people believe the future will be better, they act in ways that make it so. They start businesses, buy homes, and invest in their communities. That belief becomes reality.
This is the piece many on the left simply do not grasp. Hope is not spin. It is economic fuel. Trump’s confidence is leadership, not recklessness.
The challenges facing the economy have not vanished, and affordability remains a pressing concern for millions of families. But the direction is clear, and the foundation is strong. With disciplined policy, meaningful tax relief, and renewed confidence, 2026 has the potential to be a historic year of American economic revival.
If momentum continues, the years ahead could mark the beginning of a new era of prosperity that restores the American Dream and secures economic dominance for decades to come.
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Send this to your favorite leftist.
They won't be swayed by the truth, only increasingly incensed by it and dug in even more deeply.
Yuppers.
.
TDS will bite Hard.
A Texas Political Shock Republicans Can’t IgnoreUntil Saturday night, Texas Senate District 9 had been represented by a Republican for over 30 years. In 2022, Kelly Hancock won the seat by 20 points. Last November, Donald Trump beat Kamala Harris in the district by 17 points. So when Hancock stepped down to accept the appointment as controller, Republicans had little reason think the seat would be in jeopardy.
But on Saturday, Democrat Taylor Rehmet trounced his Republican opponent by over 14 points – a 31-point swing since the 2024 election. The results have sent shock waves through the Texas Republican establishment.
Some Republican pundits have discounted the results because it was a special election with a very low turnout. It is certainly true that the turnout in Saturday’s election was much lower than last November (15% vs. 64%). But the results are consistent with polling over the last year, signaling that Texans have been turning increasingly negative on the Republican leadership of the state.
The Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC) is a United States -based conservative advocacy organization and interest group, founded in 2007. It was founded by Daniel C. Weber
I am not worried at all.
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