logo
Fox News anchor caught off guard when confronted with Fox's bad poll numbers for Trump on inflation

Fox News anchor caught off guard when confronted with Fox's bad poll numbers for Trump on inflation

Independent31-07-2025
Fox News anchor Harris Faulkner was seemingly caught flatfooted on Thursday when a Democratic guest referenced her own network's polling to show that the vast majority of Americans disapprove of the way Donald Trump is handling inflation.
Instead, Faulkner heaped praise on the president over his handling of the economy while parroting Trump's own false boasts about inflation plummeting, prompting her guest to point out that recent data shows that prices have been on the rise in recent months.
During Thursday's broadcast of The Faulkner Focus, the veteran anchor welcomed former Kamala Harris adviser Mike Nellis to her program to discuss Harris' decision to forego a California gubernatorial run next year, which has sparked speculation that the former vice president may try for another White House run in 2028.
Towards the end of the discussion, which also included National Review writer Caroline Downey, Faulkner pointed out that the Democratic presidential field in the next election would be 'crowded' before asking Nellis who he thought would become the frontrunner.
'Who do you think this really does come down to having to impress the American people right now? Because your party, Mike, you guys aren't all moving in concert with one another,' she declared.
Acknowledging that the Democrats are 'having tough conversations' after losing the 2024 election, Nellis went on to say 'both political parties are out of touch with the day-to-day lives of most Americans' before bringing up poor approval numbers for the president on economic issues.
'There's a lot of polling out in the last couple of weeks talking about how frustrated people are with inflation and pricing and housing and things like that,' Nellis continued, prompting Faulkner to cut him off to insist that the economy is booming.
'Inflation's at two percent! The GDP just popped,' she exclaimed. Nellis, meanwhile, retorted that inflation is actually 'at 2.9 percent,' referencing the 'core' inflation index that was released earlier this month. The Consumer Price Index, meanwhile, rose 2.7 percent year-over-year, and prices were up 0.3 percent over the course of the month.
'The GDP just popped to three percent! I mean, we haven't seen that in a very long time,' a flustered Faulkner proclaimed, apparently unaware that the United States had two straight quarters of at least three percent growth last year – and had exceeded that mark in four of five quarters heading into the 2024 election.
'If I could point you to Fox's own polling, Trump is negative 30 percent on pricing and inflation and is as unpopular as Joe Biden ever was,' Nellis shot back. 'So the American people are frustrated with where their lives are right now.'
With the Democratic strategist also highlighting other surveys that Americans feel they are worse off than they were six months ago, Faulkner interjected to let Downey get the final word and to bring the segment to an end.
'President Trump is rapidly delivering on his economic promises,' Downey said before Faulkner wrapped things up.
Nellis, meanwhile, did appear to slightly exaggerate how poorly Trump fared in the latest Fox News survey – a survey that recently led the president to once again rage about the network's polling division.
Though he claimed that the president is negative 30 points on his handling of inflation, the network's most recent poll finds that Trump is actually only down 26 points, as 36 percent of Americans approve of the way he's dealing with the issue, compared to 62 percent who do not
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Crypto exchange Bullish's shares set to more than double in debut
Crypto exchange Bullish's shares set to more than double in debut

Reuters

time21 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Crypto exchange Bullish's shares set to more than double in debut

Aug 13 (Reuters) - Bullish's (BLSH.N), opens new tab shares were indicated to open at more than double their initial public offering price on Wednesday, signaling growing investor confidence in the sector and boosting prospects for future U.S. listings by other digital asset firms. If the Peter Thiel-backed crypto exchange starts to trade at the last indicated range of $85 to $88 on the NYSE, it could potentially value the company at more than $12.86 billion. The parent of crypto news website CoinDesk raised $1.11 billion in an IPO priced at $37 apiece, valuing it at $5.4 billion, as mainstream crypto adoption accelerates in a sector that recently surpassed $4 trillion in value. "Bullish came out with an attractive initial valuation, and investors responded by aggressively bidding it up during the pre-IPO process," said Jeff Zell, senior research analyst at IPO Boutique. A string of regulatory wins under a pro-crypto White House, corporate treasury adoption, and ETF inflows have prompted investors to embrace the once-scorned digital asset class, driving bellwether bitcoin to record highs. Exchange operator Gemini and asset manager Grayscale are also among the crypto firms that have confidentially filed to go public. "We've gone public today, and there's a slew of others that are going to follow us, and I think that is net beneficial, because it gives people more options in terms of how they access this asset class," Bullish President Chris Tyrer told Reuters in an interview. Bullish is close to concluding a two-year process to obtain a virtual currency license known as a "BitLicense" in New York, which would allow the company to operate in the state, Tyrer said. The BitLicense requires companies to comply with requirements related to know-your-customer, anti-money laundering and capital. Bullish plans to convert a significant portion of the IPO proceeds to stablecoins — a slice of the crypto space that has boomed since U.S. President Donald Trump signed the Genius Act, creating a regulatory regime for the dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies. Bullish's debut marks a rare U.S. listing by a crypto exchange, joining larger retail-focused rival Coinbase (COIN.O), opens new tab, which became the first crypto player to be included in the benchmark S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab index in May. Founded in 2020, Bullish targets institutional clients, whose crypto holdings are expected to rise as a new White House order aims to allow alternative investments in 401(k) retirement plans. "A pure institutional strategy positions Bullish for more stable, recurring revenue than exchanges reliant on retail volumes, which tend to be cyclical and sentiment-driven," said Michael Hall, co-chief investment officer and founding partner at Nickel Digital Asset Management. Bullish CEO Tom Farley was previously the president of NYSE. "For a sector still overcoming reputational headwinds, that kind of leadership experience can be a differentiator in securing institutional mandates," Hall said.

Trump calls Russian city incorrect name before crunch talk with Putin
Trump calls Russian city incorrect name before crunch talk with Putin

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Trump calls Russian city incorrect name before crunch talk with Putin

US President Donald Trump has mistakenly referred to Russia's second-largest city as " Leningrad" on Truth Social, despite its name being St Petersburg since 1991. This geographical error followed Trump's repeated assertion that he was "going to Russia" for his upcoming summit with Vladimir Putin, which is actually scheduled to take place in Alaska, a US state since 1959. The highly anticipated meeting between Trump and Putin is set for Friday to discuss the war in Ukraine. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt largely dismissed Trump's geographical slips and described the upcoming summit as a "listening exercise" for him. Leavitt lowered expectations for the meeting, acknowledging that a definitive solution to the conflict is unlikely to emerge as only one party involved in the war will be present.

Starmer says Ukraine ceasefire viable because of Trump
Starmer says Ukraine ceasefire viable because of Trump

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Starmer says Ukraine ceasefire viable because of Trump

Sir Keir Starmer has said that a ceasefire in Ukraine is only 'viable' thanks to the actions of Donald Trump. Co-chairing a meeting of the 'coalition of the willing' - a European-led effort aimed at securing lasting peace in Ukraine - on Wednesday (13 August), the prime minister said the US president's actions have provided a 'chance' to end the war. He said: 'For three and a bit years this conflict has been going on and we haven't got anywhere near the prospect of actually a viable solution of bringing it to a ceasefire. And now we do have that chance because of the work that the President has put in.' The meeting came ahead of high stakes 'one-on-one' talks between Trump and Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday (15 August).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store