As the national debt has risen, Trump officials kept saying it would fall

Washington Post logoWhen Republicans cut corporate and individual taxes in 2017, they promised two things: It would grow the economy and it would not add to the national debt. Neither of those have borne out.

Not only has economic growth slowed, in part because of President Trump’s ongoing trade war with China, but the deficit has grown to its highest level in seven years, in part due to reduced tax revenue.

To counter these trends, the Trump administration has engaged in economic double-talk, including repeatedly saying, falsely, that the federal deficit — and by extension, the national debt — was falling or would fall in the future. You can watch Trump officials do this again and again — even as the debt rises — in the video above.

View the complete September 23 article by JM Rieger on The Washington Post website here.

Public debt of the United States of America from July 2017 to July 2018, by month (in billion U.S. dollars)

The website Statista.com provides a month-by-month graph of the U.S. national debt.  Take a look at what has happened in the last year:

So much for Republican fiscal responsibility.  This is what has happened since they passed the Trump wealthcare bill.  As we move toward this November’s election, remember Rep. Erik Paulsen voted FOR the bill that caused this increase in debt.

Visit the site here.