When President Trump called affordability concerns a "hoax," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) decided he'd heard enough.
The War Over Economic Reality
On Tuesday, Schumer shared a video on X showing Trump dismissing "affordability" as a "fake narrative" and a "Democrat scam." Schumer's response was blunt: "The only 'hoax' is Donald's repeated lies about the economy."
Schumer highlighted what many Americans see in their monthly budgets: groceries cost more, housing is expensive, and utility bills keep climbing. "We all feel the pain," he wrote, making it clear he thinks this affordability crisis is happening "on his watch."
Here's where it gets interesting. While Trump dismisses the whole thing, some members of his own administration are actually touting victories on prices. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins (R-Texas) recently claimed egg prices dropped 86 percent over the 10 months since the administration took office in January, crediting Trump with being "resolutely focused on making America more affordable again."
Economists Sound the Alarm
Mark Zandi, Chief Economist at Moody's Analytics, isn't mincing words either. He recently stated that the country is in the midst of a "serious affordability crisis," and he's pointing fingers at Trump's tariffs and restrictive immigration measures for "juicing" inflation.
"It didn't have to be this way," Zandi noted, explaining that inflation was actually returning to the Federal Reserve's target levels earlier this year before recent policy moves complicated things.
So who's right? Trump says there's no problem. His Agriculture Secretary says prices are dropping. Schumer says Americans are hurting. And economists are warning about a genuine crisis. The disconnect between political messaging and kitchen-table reality has rarely been starker.