Trump won not just by claiming a handful of key zip codes, but by accruing gains all over — increasing his vote share in cities, suburban areas, and rural stretches alike, and improving his performance with young men and voters of color in particular.
With his threat to impose tariffs on all imported goods, the rest of the world will have to learn how to better work together, without becoming too dependent on each other.
Dissatisfaction with the economy drove voters to the polls. And Donald Trump was viewed as the change candidate.
We came out of the Covid pandemic and then experienced the biggest inflation spike that most of us have seen in our lifetime. That takes a toll.
Vice President Kamala Harris won a slim majority of votes cast by Latinos, but Trump bested a high set by George W. Bush.
Tennessee voters trust Donald Trump more with the economy and their pocketbooks than the Biden-Harris Administration.
CBS News polling showed that 45% of voters said their financial situation was worse today than it was four years ago.
Advocates in Milwaukee believe the economy, combined with frustration over failures to implement immigration reform, is why some Latinos backed Trump.
The economy was a key issue for many voters frustrated by inflation and the overall state of the economy. The stock markets soared on the news that Donald Trump had won the election. NBC News' Christine Romans.
Trump will inherit an economy already on relatively solid footing. Inflation has slowed and wages have begun to catch up with higher prices. While companies aren’t hiring at the same breakneck pace as they were coming out of the pandemic,
President-elect Donald Trump tapped into deep anxieties about an economy that seemed unable despite its recent growth to meet the needs of the middle class.
The answer at the end of the day was not that complicated and it probably didn’t have anything to do with the Democratic Party of Georgia. To paraphrase Democratic strategist James Carville, it’s still the economy, stupid.