đ¨ Trump Calls Looming Supply Shortages a âGood Thingâ
May 8, 2025

Donald Trump claims plummeting activity at US ports â which is set to lead to empty shelves â is a âgood thing,â as his trillion-dollar extra tax disrupts supply chains and a âserious Trump recessionâ looms. While working families brace for supply shortages and higher costs, Trump continues to dodge responsibility for the âfull-blown crisisâ he created.
NEW: Donald Trump says that plummeting port activity is a âgood thing,â downplaying recession warnings.
Axios: âPresident Trump called the slowdown at U.S. ports in the wake of his tariffs on China going into effect a âgood thing.â
âWest Coast ports warn of plunging cargo volume, with likely far-reaching economic effects in the weeks and months ahead. âŚ
âTrump falsely suggested that the dock slowdown is a positive sign for the U.S. economy. âŚ
âTrumpâs tariffs have led to slowdowns at vital U.S. shipping hubs.
âThe tariff shock is likely to ripple through the economy, eventually hitting domestic transportation and warehousing, employment, as well as the price and availability of goods on shelves âŚâ
REMINDER: Trumpâs chaotic and reckless agenda is steering the country toward recession â and Americans are worried about his dangerous agenda to jack up costs.
NPR: âThe U.S. economy shrinks as Trumpâs tariffs spark recession fearsâ
CNBC: âWednesdayâs first-quarter GDP report added to fears the U.S. is already in a recessionâ
Wall Street Journal: âU.S. Faces Recession This Year, IIF Saysâ
Yahoo/YouGov poll: 73% of Americans said they were concerned about affording groceries.
Fox Business: âWith the economic tumult, a serious concern has emerged: stagflationâ
A majority of Americans believe the economy is on the wrong track under Trump â including a growing share of Republicans.
Bloomberg: âUS consumer sentiment fell to one of the lowest readings on record and long-term inflation expectations climbed to the highest since 1991 on fears of the economic fallout from tariffs. âŚ
âAbout two-thirds of respondents see their inflation-adjusted incomes falling in the year ahead. Nearly as many expect unemployment to rise.â
Conference Board: âNotably, the share of consumers expecting fewer jobs in the next six months (32.1%) was nearly as high as in April 2009, in the middle of the Great Recession. In addition, expectations about future income prospects turned clearly negative for the first time in five years, suggesting that concerns about the economy have now spread to consumers worrying about their own personal situations.â
Joe Weisenthal, Bloomberg: âMarch saw a big drop in how *Republicans* feel about the state of the US economyâ
NBC News/SurveyMonkey: 60% of Americans say the country is on the wrong track, 60% disapprove of Trumpâs handling of inflation and cost of living.