As gas prices surged in the early weeks of the U.S. war with Iran, a Republican Senate candidate in Minnesota had a suggestion for voters struggling at the pump: cut back on the coffee.
“Maybe you take one less trip to Starbucks and so that gas goes a little further,” Michele Tafoya said on a radio show recently, advising listeners to be “patriots” and keep a “stiff upper lip” until fuel prices come back down.
That comment, from the former NFL sideline reporter-turned-Senate-candidate, comes as public perceptions of the U.S. economy are spiraling — a negative sentiment compounded by President Donald Trump’s decision to launch a war with Iran and drive gas prices up to $4 a gallon for the first time since 2022.
Tafoya is hardly alone.
Across key Senate races this cycle, several Republican Senate candidates have downplayed rising costs and defended the president’s economic policies.
Democrats are already moving to weaponize those comments, arguing they underscore a broader disconnect between GOP candidates and economic anxieties.
In a statement to MS NOW, New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, who chairs the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, said the “out-of-touch comments” by GOP Senate hopefuls “show a stunning contempt for Americans who are struggling to get by.”
“Everything costs too much, but instead of taking action to lower prices, Republicans are dismissing voters’ concerns, denying economic reality, and blaming families,” Gillibrand said. “In November, voters will hold Republicans accountable for mocking their concerns while making life more expensive.”
Republicans, for their part, have been eager to align themselves with Trump’s economic message.
At a campaign stop in March — as the Iran war drove gas prices higher — Michigan Republican Senate candidate Mike Rogers shrugged off concerns about rising fuel costs.
“We’re gonna be fine, we got plenty of oil,” he said, according to a clip obtained by Punchbowl News.
“We’re going to pump our oil right here in America, and we got plenty,” he added.
Rogers has also repeatedly defended the president’s tariffs, even as economists link those policies with increasing consumer prices. In September, Rogers said that while he does not like prices going up, “I’d rather have good manufacturing jobs here,” according to a local press report.
In North Carolina, GOP nominee Michael Whatley regularly touts Trump’s economic stewardship.
“We feel pretty good about the economy,” he told Fox News in February.
In January, on Hugh Hewitt’s radio show, Whatley said Americans had “seen inflation prices come down so dramatically since President Trump took over.” And in February, appearing on the same show, he said the “North Carolina economy is getting back on its feet.”
“We are seeing right now that jobs are being created, paychecks are bigger, costs are coming down,” he said.
Those comments could easily come back to haunt Whatley, as his Democratic opponent — former North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper — makes affordability central to his campaign.
It’s a similar story in Ohio, where incumbent Sen. Jon Husted — who is seeking a full term in the upper chamber — has defended Trump’s trade policies. In October, Husted argued Trump was making “great progress” in taking on China, saying the country had been “ripping off America for decades” and it was “time to stand up to them,” according to a local press report.
In December, Husted also suggested there are three ways to address affordability concerns: “earn more, keep more of what you earn, and drive down prices.” He insisted the GOP Congress and Trump were doing just that.
Recent polling, however, suggests Americans aren’t buying it.
In December, long before the president opted to launch a war on Iran that led to higher gas prices, polling showed that only 36% of U.S. adults approved of the Trump’s handling of the economy. By late March, that figure had dropped to 29%, with 62% disapproving of Trump’s economic moves.
And it’s not just perception. Recent jobs reports show hiring on the whole has become stagnant, with the U.S. at times shedding jobs in recent months. The unemployment rate has also ticked slightly upward over the last year. And while the inflation rate has steadied — holding above 2% — that’s only slightly lower than the final months of the Biden presidency.
Of course, these GOP candidates aren’t completely ignoring reality.








