Biden's so called achievements

 DC Daily Journal:

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Despite significant achievements under his administration — including the addition of 16 million jobs, infrastructure funding, and investments in clean energy — Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris struggled to convince Americans of the economy’s strength.

Inflation spikes in 2022 overshadowed their progress, leaving many households grappling with higher costs for essentials like food, gas, and housing.

According to the AP VoteCast survey, over 60% of voters in November’s election described the economy as “poor” or “not so good.” Nearly 70% of those voters supported Trump, enabling his comeback after his 2020 defeat to Biden.

In his speech, Biden underscored that Trump would be inheriting “the strongest economy in modern history,” pointing to falling inflation, low unemployment at 4.2%, and record-high applications for new businesses. He touted these accomplishments as benchmarks for the future.
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This is more politics of fraud from Biden.  The jobs he is allegedly taking credit for or the ones he killed during the pandemic.  The inflation Biden caused in the first year of his administration was the highest in recent history and the drops are from that high of 20 percent inflation he caused in his first year of office with his reckless spending spree.  In other words, if you add three years of 4.2 % to 20 % you get 36.6 % higher cost currently over what they were when Trump was in office.  That is why groceries, going out to eat, and gas are still so high while car and truck prices are through the roof.

See also:

More Than a Third of Americans Cut Back on or Skip Household Necessities to Pay Energy Bills, Led by Southern States

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 More than one-third of Americans (34.3%) have reported cutting back on or skipping necessary expenses at least once in the past 12 months to pay for utilities. Additionally, 23.4% have been unable to pay part or all of their energy bill during the same period. These figures are up slightly from a similar period in 2023, when 34.1% cut back on or skipped necessary expenses and 22.0% couldn’t pay their full energy bills.

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