Republicans stare down inflation abyss with midterms fast approaching
Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., talks with a reporter in the U.S. Capitol’s Statuary Hall on Friday, March 27, 2026.
Tom Williams | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images
Republicans have said for months that inflation is former President Joe Biden‘s problem. Now, they’re staring down the barrel of an inflation crisis of their own making just in time for the midterm election, and the blame game is just getting started.
Inflation ticked up to 3.8% year-over-year in April, the highest mark since 2023. Much of that spike is coming on the back of soaring energy prices, which have persisted since President Donald Trump launched a war in Iran.
Trump and congressional Republicans swept into power in 2024 by promising to defeat the inflation that dogged Biden’s presidency. But they now risk getting trounced in the 2026 midterm election due to their own inflation crisis, and they are struggling to find a clear message to battle high prices as the president pushes for a $400 million White House ballroom and a $1.8 billion taxpayer-funded legal relief fund for victims of government “weaponization.”
Members of the congressional GOP are now left wondering whether their priorities are in the right place.
“When half of America is living paycheck-to-paycheck, the word ‘ballroom’ should not be in anyone’s vocabulary,” Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., a moderate who represents a swing district, told reporters at the Capitol. “We should always be focused on affordability, always. Both parties have gotten it wrong. That’s why we’re in the crisis we’re in now.”
Fitzpatrick’s comments were a rare rebuke of Trump’s priorities from within his own party, which has largely remained in lockstep with the president through months of economic tumult brought on by an on-again, off-again tariff regime and now the war with Iran.
And asked about what Republicans could tell voters in their districts, Fitzpatrick didn’t exactly make the case for the GOP.
“How about both parties are broken, which is why we need to do away with the two-party system?” he said.
He’s not alone among Republicans who are warning that the pinch of inflation is going to hurt the party in November, especially after years of elevated costs have ground on Americans.
“It’s not as bad as the worst it was under Biden,” said Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., a frequent critic of the president who will retire at the end of his term. “But I think most Americans have not recovered from all that, and that’s why it’s still an issue.”
Bacon trained his fire on Trump’s tariffs for inflation.
“I think tariffs are bad policy. Milton Friedman, Adam Smith, they’re the bibles of conservatism, and we have violated those,” he said, referring to free-market economists. “We should not have rolled over on that here in Congress.”
Asked what Republicans can say to show Americans that life is better under GOP rule, Bacon said that “the president can surely show that we secured the border.”
It’s been four years since the…
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