Donald Trump’s Davos speech has caught attention for a myriad of reasons, but one part that has barely been mentioned is how he gloated about his “Big Beautiful Bill.” At one point, he joked that he was even walking around the forum congratulating business leaders for doubling their net worth since he became president. Coming at a time when 1 in 4 US households are living check to check, it reads as insensitive, to say the least.
CNN is calling the economy “stagnant.” Nobody is willing to quite jump the gun and call the current economic situation a “recession,” because that term has a mathematical definition that can bog down any conversation about a downturn. The fact remains that, according to a Bank of America Institute analysis, while the administration calls affordability a “hoax,” 24% of American households spend over 95% of their monthly income on household necessities.
And what did Trump have to say to a group of business leaders he has been shown to have such sway with? Trump explained to the crowd, “I don’t even ask anybody how you’re doing now. It’s like everybody is making so much money.” Trump joked that when CEOs asked him why he was congratulating them, he would respond, “I said, ‘you’ve doubled your net worth since I’ve been president, right?’ He said, ‘Yeah, even more than that.’ They would say, ‘Even more. We’re doing even better than that.’ And we’ve given you a platform where you can put your genius to work.”
Trump pointed specifically to his “Big Beautiful Bill” tax deductions as the key reason business owners at Davos are having such a marvelous financial time. He claimed the same thing happened during his first term. Trump said, “I always said, that’s what made my first term so successful. Because, I mean, people were buying things that — I have a friend who bought an airplane, he never used it. He just bought it. He said, ‘I get a — I deducted it.’”
Poll after poll keeps coming out showing that regular Americans are not feeling the trickle-down effects of the wealth Trump is flaunting among his rich friends. A recent poll revealed that 7 in 10 Americans view the economy as “poor.” And while sometimes business needs a little time to get going, it reads as tone-deaf for the rich insiders of the administration to already be clinking champagne glasses while everyone else is struggling with heating bills.
The administration has also been showing more and more examples of being out of touch with ordinary people. The White House recently announced a new healthcare plan where it would apparently send people money directly so they can purchase their own health insurance, misunderstanding that solo negotiating will never match up to collective bargaining and subsidized premiums.
But perhaps the worst example came when Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was talking about housing costs and said, “Someone, maybe your parents for their retirement, bought five, 10, 12 homes. So, we don’t want to push the mom and pops out. We just want to push everyone else out.”
The administration has never sounded less interested in the concerns of the working class.
Published: Jan 22, 2026 11:23 am