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Home»International News»President tries to champion economic wins as Iran war paints a dark cloud over midterm elections
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President tries to champion economic wins as Iran war paints a dark cloud over midterm elections

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auMay 5, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
President tries to champion economic wins as Iran war paints a dark cloud over midterm elections
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Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Erica Green

May 5, 2026 — 3:30pm

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Washington: Facing pressure to address the economic fallout of his war in Iran, President Donald Trump sought to portray his policy wins for small businesses as evidence that he was succeeding in building up the economy.

Speaking to business leaders from across the country at an event in the East Room of the White House, Trump declared that slashing taxes and regulations had yielded “record business,” and that the economy was “roaring.” The White House described the Small Business Week event as highlighting “the extraordinary revival of Main Street under his ‘America First’ agenda.”

Trump appears beside reality TV star Rick Harrison at the small business event at the White House.Bloomberg

But looming over it all was a war abroad that Trump had begun, and whose economic impact is compounding cost-of-living concerns among Americans, many of whom increasingly say their economic reality has worsened under his tenure.

Trump’s comments Monday created a sharp contrast with the economic reality outside Washington, as rising energy prices hammer families and businesses alike.

With talks between the United States and Iran at a standstill, the price of Brent Crude, the global benchmark for oil, reached about $US114 per barrel by Monday evening. The spike came at a moment of great uncertainty about the blockade in the Strait of Hormuz, a key thoroughfare for the world’s oil.

Related Article

A container ship sits at anchor as a small motorboat passes in the foreground in the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday.

Trump, who often focuses on economic indicators such as the stock market that have very little impact on the bottom line for most Americans, has brushed off the pain caused by his own policies with promises that it is temporary.

During the event, he sought to downplay the rising cost of energy, saying that it had been projected to rise much more, and that he saw it “going down very substantially” soon.

But for Americans, relief remained unreachable. The average cost of a gallon of gas topped $US4.45 ($6.22) nationwide, according to the American Automobile Association, an increase of more than $US1 compared with last year. Soaring even higher was the cost of diesel, which shot above $US5.64 per gallon, roughly a $US2 increase from this time in 2025. This increases the cost of transporting products, which is likely to result in higher prices for consumers.

Also at Monday’s event, Trump offered a new defence of one of his most consequential policies, slashing the federal workforce, which resulted in the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs. He boasted that private-sector jobs had been created in their place, and suggested that federal workers were grateful to him for firing them.

People wave placards as Trump speaks at The Villages event last Friday.AP

“And I feel sorry for everyone, you know, it’s a hard thing to do,” he said.

“Many of those people voted for me, but now they like me because they went out, they got private sector jobs that they like better and is paying them sometimes two or three times more money.”

With the midterm elections just months away, Trump has struggled to hone an economic message, despite pleas from Republicans to focus on how his policies are improving the lives of everyday Americans and pledges from his aides that he would travel the country doing just that.

Foreign distraction

Trump has faced accusations from some in his “America First” base that he is too focused on foreign policy and global conflicts and not enough on the kitchen-table issues that he campaigned on addressing, such as the cost of living, grocery and petrol prices.

But delivering a focused message on the economy is not much in Trump’s style.

During the more than one-hour speech on Monday, Trump veered off into other topics, including criticising former president Joe Biden, boasting about passing cognitive tests and complaining about polls and media coverage. He also offered a lengthy account of how he had decided to renovate the reflecting pool at the National Mall.

The event featured other speakers who praised Trump, including Rick Harrison of the reality television show Pawn Stars and Energy Secretary Chris Wright, who praised his popularity in Venezuela after the United States removed its president.

Last Friday, Trump delivered another economic speech at The Villages in Florida, where he was billed to speak about how his tax and domestic policy legislation would help older Americans who may be relying on Social Security.

Trump dances on stage after speaking at The Villages last Friday.AP

But for much of the roughly 1.5-hour speech, Trump’s tax policies seemed to be an afterthought.

Standing in front of hundreds of people from a retirement community in a school gymnasium, Trump criticised the event staff for not ensuring his microphone was loud enough. He launched into a xenophobic tirade against the Somali community in the United States, mocked a transgender weightlifter and brought Dr Phil McGraw, the talk show host, onstage to speak.

He blamed his predecessors for high prices and inflation, and once again dismissed the issue of affordability, which he has called a “hoax”.

“And the Democrats start screaming, ‘affordability, affordability’ – they’re the ones that caused the problem,” Trump said.

Trump did touch on his domestic policies, pledging to defend Social Security and Medicare. But he also acknowledged that those issues did not have his full attention. He assured the crowd of supporters that Dr Mehmet Oz, Trump’s administrator of the Centres for Medicare and Medicaid Services, knew more about “Medicaid, Medicare, medical crap than any human being.”

Trump said Oz was telling him about the programs on the way to The Villages, making it “the most boring trip I’ve ever made.”

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