Trump Takes Credit For Stock Market High, Gets Dragged Down On Twitter
President Donald Trump, who repeatedly warned that the stock market would plummet if he lost the election, took credit on Tuesday as the Dow Jones Industrial Average surpassed the 30,000 mark for the first time.
Stocks climbed for the second day in a row. On Monday, Trump had announced that his administration would cooperate with President-elect Joe Biden’s transition team, after blocking them for more than two weeks. Biden also began announcing his Cabinet picks. The Wall Street Journal reported that the winding up of election uncertainty, coupled with promising potential coronavirus vaccines, appeared to boost investor confidence in an economic recovery.
In a one-minute White House press conference Tuesday, Trump praised his administration for getting to the “sacred” 30,000 number, citing the vaccine progress, but did not mention that the presidential transition was in motion.
Two of his children, Ivanka and Eric Trump, celebrated the stock market high on Twitter. But other users of the platform were baffled by the president’s readiness to pat himself on the back.
Critics quickly threw back to the final presidential debate in October, when Trump predicted without evidence that if Biden were elected, “the stock market will crash.”
Trump said if Joe Biden is elected “the stock market will crash”.
The DOW went over 30K today - for the first time in history - as the Biden transition is officially underway... pic.twitter.com/Cp2hXoxK9M— Rex Chapman🏇🏼 (@RexChapman) November 24, 2020
Remember when @realDonaldTrump warned during the campaign that your 401k's and stocks would "disintegrate and disappear" if @JoeBiden won? Well, the Dow Jones industrial average just reached a record high of 30,000 points. And it's 3 weeks since Election Day.
— Wolf Blitzer (@wolfblitzer) November 24, 2020
Others nodded to 2016, when Trump and multiple commentators attributed any market gains post-Election Day to his victory.
Trump has repeatedly insisted that the stock market’s performance under his leadership should be judged not from the day of his January 2017 inauguration, but instead from the date of his election the previous November. Last year he claimed the market soared in that period “due to the euphoria of getting Obama/Biden OUT.”
As President Trump claims credit for the Dow jumping above 30,000, remember that he repeatedly asserted that he deserved credit for everything the Dow did from Election Day 2016 on. pic.twitter.com/cH4jz6NCiE
— Kevin M. Kruse (@KevinMKruse) November 24, 2020
And a lot of media outlets -- CNN, Fortune, Bloomberg, The Atlantic -- repeated the idea that every bit of good economic news after Election Day 2016 was due to a "Trump Bump" pic.twitter.com/K6uyD4a0Sw
— Kevin M. Kruse (@KevinMKruse) November 24, 2020
Team Trump has insisted, for four years, that he should be credited for all growth in the stock market since *Election Day* 2016 (rather than his inauguration in Jan 2017) -- and now wants credit for market gains in the weeks since he's been voted out of office https://t.co/3WbD2csiPR
— Catherine Rampell (@crampell) November 24, 2020
Some critics speculated that the markets got a bump in anticipation of more stable leadership amid the COVID-19 pandemic:
Not clear if Ivanka understands that this rally is because her father is leaving office and better public health and economic leadership is settling in. https://t.co/mcllXbdWrA
— Tim O'Brien (@TimOBrien) November 24, 2020
Does she realize the market is celebrating the end of her father's dalliance with power? https://t.co/VGqsvAjO93
— Max Burns (@themaxburns) November 24, 2020
But most emphatically, commentators were disgusted that the stock market numbers were the ones Trump was willing to take credit for, even as the nation sets records in daily new coronavirus cases, hospitalizations and deaths, and many Americans not invested in stocks suffer economic distress awaiting a pandemic relief package that still hasn’t come.
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The stock market (Dow) hit 30,000.
The COVID-19 death count in America hit 260,000.
Guess which one Trump takes credit for?— Stephen King (@StephenKing) November 24, 2020
Someone should tell the thousands and thousands of people in lines at food banks that the Dow just hit 30,000
— Ben Wexler (@mrbenwexler) November 24, 2020
It's been fascinating to watch the Dow Jones climb along with today's COVID death toll on CNN. Your father is only responsible for one of them. https://t.co/MfrFwVdfhU
— Joan Walsh (@joanwalsh) November 24, 2020
Guessing all the people waiting in line at food banks don’t give a fuck about the Dow hitting 30k.
— Katie Hill (@KatieHill4CA) November 24, 2020
If trickle-down economics worked at all, like even a teeny-tiny bit, people wouldn’t be flocking to food banks right as the stock market hit its all-time high.
— Adam Best (@adamcbest) November 24, 2020
This is 2020 in a nutshell:
-Dow hits 30,000 for first time ever (+62% since March 23)
-Meanwhile, thousands wait in line for free food in Houston. Food banks across the US warn of growing need. Over 20 million are on unemployment aid
(photo by @MeridithKohut ) pic.twitter.com/DmA4L9kjpl— Heather Long (@byHeatherLong) November 24, 2020
The Dow soared 454 points today, going over historic high of 30,000. Translation: If you had $5,000,000 worth of leading stocks in Nov 2015 (Dow = $17,587), today they're worth $7,050,000.
Meanwhile, if you receive $1500/mo in Social Security, your income is stagnant but costs ^. https://t.co/cv3Mx9M6Tl— Laurie Garrett (@Laurie_Garrett) November 24, 2020
This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.