The big story in the mass media and blogs over the past two days was the way Trump answered a question in an appearance in New York City about whether he would do anything to make child care affordable; he was asked to be specific. He gave a long (two minute) reply that was meandering and incoherent. He seemed to say that the money that the U.S. will collect from tariffs will be so huge that it will wipe out the national deficit and make everything possible, including the cost of child care, assuming that tariffs would produce revenue instead of raising consumer prices. He didn’t answer the question.
Meanwhile, in another setting, JD Vance was asked about child care. He responded that parents could ask grandparents or other relatives to help out; and he suggested lowering the certification requirements for child care providers.
The New York Times must have realized, based on the keen interest in this story, that its original reporting was inadequate. At 4:42 pm EST, the Times published a story by Michael C. Bender about what happened. With this article, The New York Times squelched persistent rumors that it was not reporting on Trump’s mental acuity.
This was the headline:
Trump and Vance Took Questions on Child Care. Their Non-Answers Said a Lot.
The former president and his running mate gave nearly equally confusing answers when asked separately this week how they would make child care more affordable.
But instead of a crisp, camera-ready reply from a seasoned three-time presidential candidate, Mr. Trump unspooled two of the most puzzling minutes of his campaign.
His answer was a jolting journey through disjointed logic about how the size of his tariffs would take care of all the nation’s children, which only raised a new, more complicated question about why he remains unable to provide straightforward answers about policies he would prioritize in a second term.
“Well, I would do that,” he said when asked if he would commit to supporting legislation to make child care more affordable, and how he would seek to do so.
“And we’re sitting down — you know, I was somebody — we had Senator Marco Rubio and my daughter Ivanka was so impactful on that issue,” Mr. Trump continued, referring to the pair’s previous push for paid family leave and expanding the child tax credit. “It’s a very important issue. But I think when you talk about the kind of numbers that I’m talking about that — because the child care is, child care, it’s, couldn’t, you know, there’s something, you have to have it. In this country, you have to have it.
“But when you talk about those numbers compared to the kind of numbers that I’m talking about, by taxing foreign nations at levels that they’re not used to, but they’ll get used to it very quickly — and it’s not going to stop them from doing business with us, but they’ll have a very substantial tax when they send product into our country. Those numbers are so much bigger than any numbers that we’re talking about, including child care, that it’s going to take care.”
Mr. Trump has long portrayed himself as the nation’s economist-in-chief, a rich businessman-turned-politician now focused on increasing the wealth of everyday Americans.
He has spent two years campaigning against rising prices for Americans, from housing to food to, yes, child care. At times, he has spoken briefly about instituting “baby bonuses” for parents of newborns, and he has said that he would consider expanding the child tax credit but has not said by how much.
Mr. Trump’s rambling answer handed Vice President Kamala Harris’s campaign an opportunity to press one of its central messages: that Mr. Trump is so out-of-touch with normal problems facing most Americans that he cannot be expected to find the solutions.
“He’s always been profoundly discursive, but this one is instructive,” said Liam Donovan, a Republican strategist. “He immediately referenced the Rubio-Ivanka effort, which is actually the right answer. He just wasn’t involved or engaged in the details. So beyond that, he just pivots to a stream of consciousness about what he knows and cares about.”
Just a day earlier, on Wednesday, Senator JD Vance, the Republican vice-presidential nominee, responded to a similar question about child care with a nearly equally confusing answer at an event in Mesa, Ariz.
Mr. Vance, like Mr. Trump, acknowledged that the issue of affordable child care was “such an important question.” But his initial answer was that parents should get help from grandparents or aunts and uncles.
“Maybe Grandma and Grandpa wants to help out a little bit more,” Mr. Vance said.
But many parents cannot rely on help from relatives — and many relatives are not in a position to help with someone else’s children. Mr. Vance seemed to acknowledge that conundrum, and pivoted to calling for fewer regulations on child-care providers, falsely saying that child-care specialists were required to have “a six-year college degree.”
“Americans are much poorer because they’re paying out the wazoo for day care,” Mr. Vance said. “Empower working families. Empower people who want to do these things for a living, and that’s what you’ve got to do.”
Mr. Trump’s answer offered little additional clarity.
The former president seemed to outline a theory that his tariffs would result in such prosperity that the nation could wipe out its $6 trillion spending deficit and pay for additional benefits, like reducing child-care costs.
“As much as child care is talked about as being expensive, it’s, relatively speaking, not very expensive compared to the kind of numbers we’ll be taking in,” Mr. Trump said on Thursday.
But Mr. Trump’s answer ignored that most economists say that the burden of tariffs are largely shouldered by middle-class consumers in the form of higher costs. Left unsaid was that he spent twice as much borrowed money during his term in the White House as President Biden has, according to an analysis by the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.
Ms. Harris has called for restoring and expanding a child tax credit and proposed a new $6,000 benefit for parents of newborns. Her child tax credit proposal would increase the maximum to $3,600 per child, up from $2,000 now.
Joseph Costello, a Harris campaign spokesman, said in a statement that the tariffs Mr. Trump is proposing as part of his “‘plan’ for making child care more affordable” would raise costs on middle-class families. “The American people deserve a president who will actually cut costs for them, like Vice President Harris’s plan to bring back a $3,600 child tax credit for working families and an expanded $6,000 tax cut for families with newborn children.”
Thursday was not the first time that Mr. Trump has punted on the question of child-care costs.
In his debate with Mr. Biden this year, before the president dropped out of the race, the moderators asked Mr. Trump twice about what he would do to help with the affordability of child care.
In his first answer, Mr. Trump went off on a series of tangents related to earlier debate topics, defending his firing of retired Gen. John Kelly as his chief of staff, denying that he had called soldiers who had died in war “suckers” and “losers,” boasting about his firing “a lot of the top people at the F.B.I.,” accusing Mr. Biden of wanting “open borders” and denouncing him as “the worst president.”
Given an additional minute to address child-care costs, the topic of the question, Mr. Trump did not mention the word once.
“Just so you understand, we have polling,” Mr. Trump began. “We have other things that do — they rate him the worst because what he’s done is so bad. And they rate me, yes, I’ll show you. I will show you. And they rate me one of the best, OK?”

Grandma and Grandpa should move back from Flor-A-Duh to O-Hi-O . Or give up their jobs as greeters in Walmart . Okay the real problem here is not Trump or Vance . It is the working class dimwits that will still vote for these out of touch ——- ——–. ( Guess the vulgarities)
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Surely many people in his maladministration tried to explain to this IMBECILE that other countries do not pay the tariffs that we place on their goods–that these are paid by those here who import those goods, who then pass them on to American consumers.
AND WHY THE F DON’T JOURNALISTS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOW UP, WHEN TRUMP SPOUTS THIS IDIOCY, BY EXPLAINING WHAT HE DOESN’T UNDERSTAND? Trump does this ALL THE TIME. Whenever Trump is on his stump in front of his chumps he says this BS.
I hope and pray that Kamala will call him out on it in no uncertain terms, will explain that he is an imbecile who doesn’t know how tariffs work and then explain what he has BACKWARD. She should conclude that a person as ignorant as he should never be in the Oval Office. Never. Ours is not an idiocracy.
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Thanks…that dump is indeed an imbecile…an evil imbecile…to boot. He should be in no way close to the “red” button.
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“AND WHY THE F DON’T JOURNALISTS IMMEDIATELY FOLLOW UP, WHEN TRUMP SPOUTS THIS IDIOCY”. Good question Bob. I wonder if there wasn’t an agreement that the journalist’s weren’t allowed to follow up questions? After the disastrous appearance at the Black Journalist’s conference Trump’s handlers might now be stipulating that Trump and Vance won’t appear if the journalists ask follow up questions.
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Yes, and in his most recent “press conference” he fielded a total of ZERO questions.
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Everyone who reports on what Trump says has an obligation to explain to readers or viewers that Trump has how tariffs work completely wrong. If they don’t do this when covering the story, they are failing in their most essential duty as journalists.
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Terrifying that such an uniformed combo might be running the country in the near future.
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Traitor Trump is so overwhelmed with failures and flaws that he’s having trouble coming up with enough lies to blame Biden for all of Trump’s failures and flaws.
If someone on Traitor Trump’s MAGA staff came up with 3×5 stack of cards Trump could carry in one or more pockets, with each card holding a short legible lie to blame Biden for Trump’s failures, crimes and flaws, there’d be too many cards for one pocket, and Trump wouldn’t be able to find a particular one that would fit any question he might get asked.
I can hear Trump now. “Wait.” As he takes out a stack of cards and starts shuffling through them, dropping many as he does, looking for the right lie to fit the question. Eventually he gives up, after he forgot what the question was, and read whatever card is in his hand and mispronounces half the words on it.
Or why doesn’t Traitor Trump fall back on his other fail-safe method when he can’t answer questions with the “best” lies — just insult the reporters and call them stupid, and liars and losers, ugly, and failures. Trump does that often, too. =
Then Traitor Trump’s obviously overwhelmed, shrinking walnut-sized brain (I’m not insulting walnuts) would only have to rely on one card with one answer to every question. A card that has all the insults that can be packed into a 12-word or shorter sentence. If that doesn’t work, Traitor Trump can fall back on his most successful slogans all in one quote: “I’m going to fix everything. Only a stable genius like me, the smartest man in the world, who knows everything there is to know, the greatest president in history, can make America MAGA.”
Wait. that’s probably too long. Maybe he just keeps repeating the same acronym for every question: MAGA.
Mr. Trump, what did you have for lunch today?” A FOX reporter asks.
Trump replies, “MAGA.” Still, it comes out sounding more like he ate a maggot sandwich — with ketchup.
No matter what Traitor Trump does or says, he isn’t losing his MAGA base. They don’t care. Even if he garbles and mispronounces MAGA, they wouldn’t care. They’d run out to find maggots to eat.
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Trump rides in a limousine, flys in a Boeing 757, and hides in a gilded cage in South Florida. He knows nothing of the world most Americans live in, especially in regard to the challenges of child care. Vance simply pretends that he is solely responsible for his success while others of his same upbringing were lazy. Neither have the slightest idea how to serve the American people. What this really demonstrates is the precipice that exists between those of means and those who have little opportunity to get beyond living on a month to month income. We have been living in a neoliberal economy for over four decades that lavishly rewards a few with unimaginable wealth while leaving the rest with crumbs. The whole issue of child care is to give families the time and resources to support themselves and their family. This affordability crisis that is finally being discussed in Democratic circles regarding health care, education, and housing is not even acknowledged by the Trump campaign, because it doesn’t matter to them. Child tax credits and the like are merely promises made simply to be swept aside so politicians can serve the grift economy that provides their wealth.
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Agreed. Trump and Vance are self serving opportunists. They seek the power and access to grift. They have no intention of rebuilding the middle class or offering any programs that will provide people some economic relief.
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RT, why don’t Trump supporters see what you see?
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Trump seems to have forgotten what his handlers have told. ‘No more than two sentences. Mr Trump. Maximum ten words each,’
Vance seems to have stumbled into to some romanticised version of his Hillbilly ‘thing’ or maybe he’s been watch Frank Capra movies and missed the underlying messages.
Either way- if they get back into the Whitehouse Putin and Xi Jinping will be content. They won’t have to break a sweat dealing with that pair.
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There was an interesting article in the New York Times yesterday by John McWhorter about Trump’s form of speech which he calls weaving. He talks about 6 things at the same time always coming back to the central theme, which is how great he is. It really is weird.
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“Weaving” is nothing new. Most good politicians (the best grifters) know how to employ the tactic. It’s a smart way of talking around an issue that someone knows nothing about while talking about issues that they think they know something/everything about. trump is just horrible at it and he sounds like a raving/raging lunatic.
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Yep. But the article really is interesting from a linguistic/rhetoric point of view.
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I take some comfort from the fact that Trump can’t live forever.
I mean, he can’t, can he?
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Not sure. What species is he, anyway?
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