Trump Sparks Outrage with Factually Dubious Economic Speech

 Trump Sparks Outrage with Factually Dubious Economic Speech

Photo: Manuel Balce Centa/AP

President Donald Trump faced sharp criticism and widespread mockery after delivering his first major economic address of his second term at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday. During the speech, Trump called for increased defense spending from NATO allies, threatened steep tariffs, criticized wars in the Middle East, and lauded the rise of artificial intelligence.

He also accused the European Union of exploiting the U.S. economically. “From the standpoint of America, the EU treats us very, very unfairly, very badly,” Trump declared. “Yet they expect to be selling and they do sell their products in the U.S.A., so we have … hundreds of billions of dollars of deficits with the EU, and nobody’s happy with it, and we’re going to do something about it.”

Trump’s remarks triggered a wave of backlash on social media, with many pointing out inaccuracies in his statements. “Says the whole world ‘saw the light’ when he won. Says ‘millions of Russians and Ukrainians died,’ he will end it by raising the price of oil.

Says ‘he negotiated the ceasefire,’ ‘he got the Olympics,’ ‘he got the soccer World Cup,’ ‘in 4 days he got more done than other admin in 4 years,’” tweeted journalist Olga Nesterova. “NONE of these statements are true.”

Patrick Neithard, editor at A Sharper Blur, ridiculed the speech, saying, “I smell sulfuric fumes coming from Davos to Downtown Switzerland right now! (Trump is speaking.) Close all doors and windows!” Screenwriter Randi Mayem Singer added, “He STILL doesn’t understand who pays tariffs.”

Donald Trump
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images/FILE

Others highlighted contradictions in Trump’s claims. Joe Gerth, columnist for the Courier-Journal, noted: “Trump, speaking at DAVOS, said the United States doesn’t need Canadian oil. I’m old enough to remember when Republicans freaked out about the Biden Administration shutting down the Keystone XL pipeline, which was intended to bring us oil from — wait for it — Canada.”

I smell sulfuric fumes coming from Davos to Downtown Switzerland right now! (Trump is speaking.) Close all doors and windows!

Patrick* Neithard (@patrickneithard.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T16:49:51.733Z

Navy veteran Sergey Scollan dismissed the speech as, “Mostly an old campaign speech and lies and moronic claims and statements.” Journalist David Cay Johnson pointed out Trump’s misleading remarks on trade deficits, posting data showing when the U.S. trade deficit with China was highest: “Notice below when the biggest deficit in goods trade took place and under which president it came down.”

HuffPost correspondent S.V. Daté summed up the speech’s inaccuracies: “I don’t know that a single assertion he has made thus far — from the state of the economy in 2019 to how tariffs work and on and on and on — is factually accurate.”

He STILL doesn't understand who pays tariffs.

Randi Mayem Singer (@rmayemsinger.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T16:41:47.832Z

The speech, filled with grandiose but questionable claims, highlighted Trump’s combative and often fact-challenged approach to international economic issues.

Welcome to Blathering in Davos. Mostly an old campaign speech and lies and moronic claims and statements.

Sergey Scollan (@vavet.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T16:48:43.179Z

Trump is telling the Billionaires forum in Davos, Switzerland, that Biden let the American trade deficit with China get out of control.Notice below when the biggest deficit in goods trade took place and under which president it came down.

David Cay Johnston (@davidcayjohnston.bsky.social) 2025-01-23T16:48:40.977Z

Related post