


The Democratic Party has been pushing a narrative that President Trump is favoring his billionaire friends while leaving Main Street in the gutter. But if that's the case, why are some of the president's billionaire supporters complaining about the severity of his tariffs as main equity indices tumble worldwide?
In recent days, a video posted on TikTok and reposted on X shows Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) maneuvering around a 'gotcha moment' question from a journalist and pointed out how the American worker finally has a president "that has their backs - protecting their jobs and raising their wages - and someone has to fight for fair trade deals."
The journalist then asked Hawley: "Even though markets are falling - and the economy looks pretty concerning right now?"
Hawley fired back: "Wall Street banks don't like it [tariffs] - but I'm not too concerned about Wall Street. I'm concerned about working people in my state. And this is finally a chance to get a fair deal on trade."
The deepening trade war has battered stocks as President Trump pushes for fair trade with key partners like China. The latest Bloomberg data shows that year-to-date losses among billionaires have been nothing short of a bloodbath.
The average net worth of the top 100 billionaires has slid since President Trump announced the "Liberation Day" tariff blitz nearly one week ago.
Trump's pro-worker, protectionist policies—aimed at defending American jobs, fulfilling the 'America First' agenda, and revitalizing U.S. manufacturing—have prompted concern from a number of billionaires, mainly because their net worth is heavily tied to the stock market.
Citing a list from Forbes, Elon Musk, Bill Ackman, Mark Cuban, Jamie Dimon, and other billionaires have questioned Trump's approach on the trade war:
Expanding more on Ackman's comments on X earlier, he advocated for a "30, 60, or 90-day pause before the tariffs are implemented tomorrow to enable negotiations to be completed without a major global economic disruption that will harm the most vulnerable companies and citizens of our country."
So, who exactly benefits from an immediate pause in the trade war? Primarily those who own large amounts of stock—billionaires like Bill Ackman—not the average worker, who owns little to nothing.
Separate from the list is billionaire Ken Griffin, who blasted Trump's latest tariffs as a tax on the middle class, calling it a "huge policy mistake."
"Even if the dream of jobs coming back to America plays out, that's a 20-year dream. It's not 20 weeks. It's not two years. It's decades," Griffin said.
Maybe we should remind the billionaires about Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent's comments last week, pointing out that stocks first began to sink with China's "DeepSeek" moment earlier this year, calling the latest downturn "A MAG7 problem, not a MAGA problem."
Which way, Wall Street? MAG7 or MAGA?