March, 21 2025, 12:48pm EDT

Instead of Dealing with the Weakening Economy, Administration Officials Are Making it Harder to Get Accurate Economic Data
As recession indicators mount, the Trump Administration fired key advisors to the Department of Labor’s statistical agency this week. Instead of addressing his weakening economy, President Trump is making it harder to get accurate economic data. Groundwork Collaborative Executive Director Lindsay Owens reacted with the following statement:
“The Trump Administration is testing whether you can prevent a recession with a disappearing act. Unfortunately tossing a scarf over the GDP numbers doesn’t change the fact that their policies have us careening toward a downturn. The fact that they are ramping up their obfuscation tactics confirms it.”
At the same time, for the third week in a row, Trump Administration officials are admitting that a recession might be on the horizon, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent saying, “there are no guarantees.” Instead of addressing this coming economic disaster, however, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is trying to inflate Tesla’s stock prices.
The Federal Reserve projected this week that Trump’s chaos will lead to higher unemployment, faster inflation, and slower growth – all the ingredients for stagflation. A fresh array of polling and economic indicators continue to show that the Trump economy is heading for disaster.
Economic Indicators:
- The Fed predicts 1.7% GDP growth this year, down from 2.1% previously projected in December. Officials also expect the unemployment rate to rise to 4.4% and inflation to edge up to 2.7% by year’s end, indicating a quickly-deteriorating economy under Trump’s mismanagement.
- Retail sales only rose 0.2% last month, falling short of expectations. Retail sales for bars and restaurants are falling – posting the largest decline since February 2023, indicating that consumers are pulling back from non-essential spending.
- Trump’s promised manufacturing boom hasn’t just failed to materialize – the sector as a whole is weakening. Factory activity as measured by the New York Fed’s Manufacturing Index had its largest decline in nearly two years. The Philadelphia Fed’s Manufacturing Survey showed that manufacturers in the region are now expecting less business and higher prices; the 6-month outlook had its third-largest decline ever.
Polling
- 67% of people surveyed by Global Strategy Group believe that it’s “likely” or “somewhat likely” that the U.S. economy enters a recession in the next year.
- Polling from NBC News found that just 18% of respondents rate the economy as “excellent,” or “good.”
- In a Harris poll, 72% of Americans are worried about President Trump’s tariffs – and 66% worry that it will take years to recover from the impact of Trump’s tariffs.
- In a Fox News poll, 79% of voters rated the economy only fair or poor, up from 77% in December 2024. In the same poll, 43% of voters approved of Trump’s handling of the economy, with 56% disapproving, and just 40% of voters approved of Trump’s handling of inflation, with 58% disapproving.
Expert Commentary
- Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell emphasized the uncertainty that’s gripping the economy in his remarks, saying, “In the current situation, uncertainty is remarkably high” and “It’s really hard to know how this is going to work out.” A Goldman Sachs analyst called the Fed’s projections “stagflationary.”
- In an interview with New York Magazine, Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said of potential economic weakening: “This is all self-inflicted. Again, the economy had its issues. There are always issues. But coming into the year, it was performing exceptionally well. It was far and away the strongest economy on the planet.”
- Wall Street fund managers, strategists, and analysts surveyed by CNBC raised their recession risk to the highest level in 6 months – 36%, up from 23%. Barry Knapp of Ironsides Macroeconomics said, “Consequently, the economic risks of something more insidious than a soft patch are growing.” Neil Dutta of Renaissance Macro Research said, “There is meaningful downside to current estimates of 2025 GDP.”
- Following the release of the Fed’s projections on Wednesday, Groundwork Collaborative’s Chief of Policy and Advocacy Alex Jacquez raised the alarm on the coming stagflation: “Voters elected President Trump to lower the cost of living, and instead, they continue to be saddled with persistently high inflation and interest rates. Launching chaotic trade wars with our allies and gutting Social Security, Medicaid, and other vital programs in order to fund tax breaks for his billionaire donors isn’t making life more affordable for working-class families. It is, however, a perfect recipe for stagflation.”
Amid the economic chaos, President Trump illegally fired two Democratic commissioners on the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), including Alvaro Bedoya, who recently sent a letter to FTC Chair Andrew Ferguson urging him to take 10 specific actions to lower prices. Instead of taking action, Trump fired him – proving once again that he has no intention to lower prices for working families.
The Groundwork Collaborative is dedicated to advancing a coherent and persuasive progressive economic worldview and narrative capable of delivering meaningful opportunity and prosperity for everyone. Our work is driven by a core guiding principle: We are the economy. Groundwork Collaborative envisions an economic system that produces strong, broadly shared prosperity and power for all people, not just a wealthy few.
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In a "major bipartisan rebuke" of President Donald Trump's illegal war on Iran, the US Senate on Tuesday passed a war powers resolution instructing Trump to withdraw US forces from Iran.
The vote was 50 to 48, with four Republicans joining the vast majority of Democrats to approve the resolution that was passed by the US House of Representatives earlier this month.
"The House and the Senate have both stood up," Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) wrote in celebration of the vote on social media. "It’s time to stop this deadly and costly conflict."
Republican Sens. Rand Paul (Ky.), Susan Collins (Maine), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), and Bill Cassidy (La.) voted in favor of the resolution while Democratic Sen. John Fetterman (Pa.) voted against it.
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Anti-war group CodePink wrote, "The will of the people is undeniable: It's time to permanently end this war of aggression."
BREAKING: US Senate passes Iran War Powers Resolution by a vote of 50-48.
The resolution demands the removal of US forces from all hostilities against Iran. It's already passed the House.
The will of the people is undeniable: it's time to permanently end this war of aggression. pic.twitter.com/27rxceRu81
— CODEPINK (@codepink) June 23, 2026
The vote was a long time coming, as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer noted it was Democrats' 10th attempt to limit Trump's ability to wage undeclared war since he unilaterally embroiled the US in a joint attack on Iran with Israel, beginning on February 28.
Schumer criticized the majority of Republicans for repeatedly failing to vote against the war, which he said would "go down in the history books as one of the worst foreign policy forays America has ever made," according to The Associated Press.
Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) wrote on social media: "Congress finally passed a war powers resolution to stop Trump's illegal war in Iran. It has been a disaster from the start. End it now."
The vote made history by being the first time both the House and Senate have passed a concurrent resolution calling for an end to a conflict since the War Powers Resolution of 1973, as The New York Times reported.
Concurrent resolutions do not require a presidential signature and therefore do not typically have the force of law. However, Democratic lawmakers and foreign policy experts argue that because Congress has the ability to declare war under the Constitution, the resolution should still restrict the president's actions.
Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-NY), who sponsored the House resolution, wrote: "With the Senate passage of my Iran War Powers Resolution, both chambers have now made clear that the president cannot continue this war of choice and must cease all hostilities against Iran. Regardless of what President Trump says, this measure is binding under the War Powers Resolution, and I will explore all legal avenues to ensure the executive complies with the will of Congress. Congress never authorized this failed war, and the president certainly has no authority to continue it indefinitely without our consent as the Constitution demands."
The vote comes about a week after the US and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding to move toward ending the war that has killed at least 3,400 in Iran and thousands more across the region. However, the subsequent ceasefire and negotiations have been rocky and uncertain due to continued Israeli attacks on Lebanon and threats from Trump.
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Even the least popular policy idea presented in the poll—taxing large companies that replace workers with AI and using the money to create a worker unemployment fund—received 69% support among US workers.
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Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) earlier this year introduced a bill that would impose a nationwide moratorium on AI data center construction “until strong national safeguards are in place to protect workers, consumers, and communities, defend privacy and civil rights, and ensure these technologies do not harm our environment."
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During open enrollment in 2025, 24.3 million Americans selected insurance plans through the ACA. This year, as the average premium was projected to more than double on average, the number of Americans enrolled through the ACA fell to just 23.1 million—a drop of nearly 1.2 million.
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The report said the coverage losses over the first year are "just the beginning" and that "millions more will lose coverage once deeper cuts go into effect."
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