Cooling inflation raises new challenges for Trump's economic attacks

The fact that inflation is now below 3% for the first time since 2021 is complicating Donald Trump’s ongoing effort to critique Kamala Harris’s economic record.

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) dropped below that threshold in July, according to data released Wednesday, showing an annual increase of 2.9% — down from 3% in June.

This latest sign of progress on price is clearly helpful to the vice president as Harris tries to distance herself from some unpopular aspects of Joe Biden's economic record and set her own economic platform this week.

But it is making Trump’s task more challenging as he tries to keep inflation front and center in the 2024 campaign.

The increasingly complicated dynamic was in evidence Wednesday evening when Trump traveled to Asheville, N.C., for a speech on the economy.

Former President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump delivers a speech on the economy in Asheville, N.C., on Wednesday. (PETER ZAY/AFP via Getty Images) · (PETER ZAY via Getty Images)

Trump focused for much of his address — as he and his fellow Republicans have done for months — on the overall 20% increase in prices since Biden and Harris took office.

But at one point, he couldn't avoid this week's good inflation news.

"Now, eventually, it's starting to maybe get under control," he acknowledged before quickly highlighting areas like car insurance, where prices have jumped in dramatic fashion over the last three and a half years.

Elsewhere in the speech, Trump appeared more eager to talk about other subjects and strayed often from his prepared remarks to focus on things ranging from immigration to a recent Time Magazine cover featuring Harris.

At one point, Trump even said of the economy, "They say it's the most important subject, I'm not sure it is."

It was a mixed message from Trump that illustrated his challenge in both finding attack lines on Harris that will stick in the minds of voters as well as making an economic case against her in the face of a resilient economy that has continued to outperform in many respects.

The challenges for Trump also come as Harris spends the week seeking to define herself more fully on the economy.

The vice president will give a much-anticipated address on Friday — also in North Carolina in nearby Raleigh — where she will be focused on issues like prices at the grocery store and "corporate price-gouging."

A focus on 'Kamalanomics'

On Wednesday, Trump's campaign also fully rolled out its effort to brand the Harris agenda as one of "Kamalanomics" — an echo of the "Bidenomics" label that the Biden team first embraced but is now more commonly used derisively by Republicans.

The effort comes after months of Trump suggesting that he doesn't believe the official numbers on inflation.