Former White House aide Sean Spicer said President Trump admitted that prices “may take a little while” for them to drop.
“He was very clear. It may take a little time, you may know, there may be a bit of pain due to the tariffs, but his eyes focus on this. “They're matching it,” says Spicer. I said it on a Monday evening About News Nation's “Hill”.
“No one has a more American feel than Donald Trump,” he told host Blake Berman.
Trump doubled his pledge to lower food prices through legislative policy after his election victory in November. However, some criticized the president for not making any immediate impact after returning to the oval office.
Spicer urged consumers to understand that changes would not occur overnight.
“he [Trump] I understand that people are paying more for things like this, but there is no magic wand that can waving in two seconds and erase it,” he said.
“He's trying to get back the manufacturing industry. [Department of Government Efficiency] thing. The bottom row is expenditure, particularly government spending, which is directly correlated with inflation. He is trying to cut out the waste there, Spicer continues. “I mean, this is a full-scale attack.”
Recently, the administration has been run by high-tech billionaire Elon Musk in the Department of Efficiency (DOGE) – federal agency spending in hopes of identifying much unnecessary spending for Democrats' negligence Access to records was granted.
The party leaders have held protests outside the Ministry of Finance and Labor, and are linked to raising concerns about mask investigations. They also pushed his move back to dismantle the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the US International Development Agency (USAID), and the education sector.
A federal judge took sides with Democrats last week to prevent Doge employees from accessing the Treasury payment system, preventing temporary major changes for the time being. .
Still, Trump has put his confidence in Musk last week, saying he's “doing a great job.”
“He finds enormous fraud, corruption and waste. You can see it in USAID, but you'll see it more in other agencies and other parts of the government,” he said on Friday. He told reporters from the White House.





