Not 12 million were let in. Which is why you can’t support that figure. I don’t need to know the exact amount to call out a blatant lie anymore than if you said 1 billion were let in.
And inflation is trending over 3% and rising every week.
i guess trumpers will do another 180 and say inflation is good, bravo Trump.
Tariffs doing great, trumpers.
today:
Trade deficit widened to $78.3B vs. $77.9B est.
The reaction to Trump's tariffs has been to shift production out of the US so that finished goods are imported to the US and only have to pay tariffs one time. US manufacturing has contracted for six straight months.
The reaction to Trump's tariffs has been to shift production out of the US so that finished goods are imported to the US and only have to pay tariffs one time. US manufacturing has contracted for six straight months.
The reaction to Trump's tariffs has been to shift production out of the US so that finished goods are imported to the US and only have to pay tariffs one time. US manufacturing has contracted for six straight months.
The reaction to Trump's tariffs has been to shift production out of the US so that finished goods are imported to the US and only have to pay tariffs one time. US manufacturing has contracted for six straight months.
The numbers are what they are. If you want to critique RCP's methodology, feel free; but don't suggest that these numbers are made up, just because you don't like them.
The same, of course, applies to numbers that reflect badly on the Trump administration: Saying "fake news" doesn't change the numbers that you don't like.
(RTTNews) - With the value of imports spiking, the Commerce Department released a report on Thursday showing the U.S. trade deficit widened more than expected in the month of July.
WASHINGTON, Sept 2 (Reuters) - U.S. manufacturing contracted for a sixth straight month in August as factories dealt with the fallout from the Trump administration's import tariffs, with some manufacturers describing the current business environment as "much worse than the Great Recession."
WASHINGTON, Sept 2 (Reuters) - U.S. manufacturing contracted for a sixth straight month in August as factories dealt with the fallout from the Trump administration's import tariffs, with some manufacturers describing the current business environment as "much worse than the Great Recession."
The US Manufacturing PMI rose to 53.3 in August 2025, indicating a renewed improvement in factory business conditions after a brief deterioration in July. This reading was the highest since May 2022 and reflects a positive trend in the manufacturing sector, with production rising and factory employment rebounding.