The promise was bold. The timeline keeps slipping. Now Donald Trump has quietly shifted the deadline
for those $2,000 “tariff-funded” checks again, and even his own words
raise more questions than answers. Economists are alarmed,
watchdogs are warning about exploding debt, and Americans
are left wondering who really pays for this so‑called bonu… Continues…
Trump’s latest comments move the target yet again, from “middle of next year”
to “toward the end of the year,” delivered with an offhand “Did I do that?”
that underlines how fluid this pledge really is. The money, he insists,
will come from “substantial” tariff revenue, as if those dollars appeared
from nowhere instead of being baked into prices Americans already pay.
Outside the rally halls and interview clips, the math looks harsher.
Budget analysts warn the plan could cost around $600 billion,
far more than tariffs are bringing in, at a moment
when deficits are surging and national debt is nearing historic highs.
Their argument is blunt: any extra revenue should slow the red ink,
not fund a headline‑grabbing giveaway.
Caught between hope and skepticism,
millions are left to decide whether
this promise is relief — or just another political mirage.