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Breaking news from the White House indicates President Trump is unhappy with several top cabinet members and may pursue a major post-holiday shake-up in January.
The leak spread across social media last night, centered on frustration that the broader economy is not improving as quickly as Trump expected.
While the stock market has hit over 80 new highs in 2025, Trump knows Wall Street gains do not reflect the everyday economy for working Americans.
Despite his strong 87% approval within the MAGA base, internal advisers warn Trump needs to keep independents, moderate Democrats, and working-class voters feeling stable.
His approval dip began with the Epstein story misstep and was worsened by the government shutdown, which—although mostly blamed on Democrats—hurt jobs numbers and voter confidence.
Mid-November polling shows Trump’s national disapproval at 58%, with 76% of voters describing the economy as “negative” despite White House claims of falling inflation.
Critics cite October job losses of 153,000, downward revisions in previous reports, and high housing and cost-of-living pressures as proof the revival is stalling.
New leaks suggest Trump may be considering replacing Susie Wiles, the first female chief of staff and a strategist he credited for the 2024 win.
This rumor feels credible because Trump historically makes mid-term shake-ups—his first term saw over 80% staff turnover driven by performance frustration.
Wiles now faces backlash from Trump loyalists accusing her of shielding the president from grassroots concerns and mishandling messaging on H-1B visas and tariff policy.
Influencers on X have amplified calls to “fire Swampy Susie,” framing her as part of the reason the administration is “gaslighting” the base on the economy.
A top pollster issued a “five-alarm” warning, prompting a defensive Trump statement that hinted at internal concern behind the scenes.
Strategically, replacing Wiles could bring economic heavyweights like Stephen Moore closer to Trump’s inner circle rather than consulting from the sidelines.
A refreshed team of populist economic voices—focused on deregulation, tariff refinements, and pro-worker policies—could energize the base ahead of the 2026 midterms.
However, a shake-up also carries risks, potentially signaling instability to moderates and independents.
Trump’s past pattern suggests this is not personal betrayal but a recalibration toward his core campaign promises on affordability, growth, and “America First” economics.
A new report shows most Americans still blame Biden for high prices but now expect Trump to bring costs down—something far harder than slowing inflation.
The FBI announced interviews with the “Seditious 6” over a video showing former CIA and military officials urging disobedience to the commander-in-chief. SHOW
Trump also reiterated support for $2,000 tariff rebate checks to prove tariffs can directly benefit American families.
Two major areas the White House may target next are tariff adjustments on food and essential goods, and cracking down on SNAP abuse and illegal migrant benefits that compete with working Americans.