Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese
Hope For America is my daily podcast where I break down politics and the ongoing destruction of the United States at the hands of our current administration. I'm fighting for America's future and survival. I expose MAGA lies and the government's failures, cut through the propaganda, and say what we're all thinking.
Hope For America with Heather Delaney Reese
79 year old Trump insists he’s not a senior citizen
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
At a Tax Day roundtable in Las Vegas, Trump tried to sell working Americans on the idea that everyone is doing better, everyone has more money, and the economy is booming. This episode breaks down how detached that performance really was. While families are dealing with rising costs, shrinking hours, higher gas prices, and deep financial stress, Trump stood on stage taking credit for prosperity many people are not feeling and exposing just how little he understands about the lives of the people he claims to champion.
The Breakdown: Trump used a Tax Day event in Las Vegas to claim that every single American at every income level has more money in their pockets because of Republican tax policy He framed those benefits as something voters could lose if they do not keep Republicans in power, turning economic anxiety into a political threat The real economy in Las Vegas tells a very different story, with sharp tourism declines, fewer shifts, smaller tips, reduced hours, and major pressure on hospitality workers Trump claimed tax refunds were soaring, but the actual IRS numbers are far lower than the picture he painted, and much of that money is being wiped out by rising costs Gas prices in Las Vegas have surged, and families are paying far more for basics while Trump insists everything is booming One of the most revealing moments came when he stopped mid-speech to ask what a corner store was, exposing just how unfamiliar he is with ordinary working-class life He also admitted how staged and manufactured some of his administration’s political stunts really are, including the McDonald’s delivery spectacle tied to DoorDash Grandma The larger insult is not just that Trump is out of touch, it is that he uses people facing real financial hardship as props while refusing to address the systems making their lives harder He celebrated small tax savings as if they were transformational, while ignoring the fact that many families are only barely staying afloat in an economy shaped by his own policies A Las Vegas police officer at the roundtable accidentally revealed the truth when he described trying to stretch every dollar in an increasingly expensive world That phrase captures the reality so many Americans are living, one where any extra money is not a windfall but a life raft in a worsening economy This episode also looks at how Trump’s politics echo Viktor Orbán’s propaganda-driven model in Hungary, and why the stunning defeat of Orbán’s machine offers a powerful reason to believe authoritarianism can still be beaten The message is simple: do not let propaganda isolate you into thinking your struggle is personal failure when millions of families are living the same reality There is still a path out, but it begins with telling the truth clearly, comparing notes, refusing the gaslighting, and remembering that organized people can still change the future
Subscribe to my Substack for more daily content and posts: https://heatherdelaneyreese.substack.com/
I'm Heather Clainey Reese, and you're listening to Hope for America, where every day I bring you the truth about our politics, our country, and the forces trying to destroy them. Together, we cut through the noise, expose the lies, and stay focused on what really matters, fighting for the survival of our country. At exactly 5 p.m. last night, the entire room stood, phones held high in the air to capture the moment while God bless the USA blasted from the speakers. Just then Donald Trump appeared to the left, and with his right hand on the rail, he pushed himself up and onto the stage before walking to his place at the table. He stopped right behind his seat where he smiled and he said, That's a great song. That's a great song. And as the music kept playing, he made the entire room stay standing, cheering for him until the last note of the music finally faded. And for the next 46 minutes, Donald Trump was surprisingly alert, shockingly able to stay on task, and showed the best impulse control we've seen from him in a while. But even that couldn't save him from himself when he began talking about how all Americans have more money in their accounts, joked that the economy is great in a city that has seen its sharpest drop in visitors in over 50 years, and then laughed about how much seniors love him and how much he loves them too, before adding that he himself is not one. He was there to speak at a tax day roundtable in Las Vegas, a celebration, if you will, of the no tax on tips policy he signed into law just last year. And it ended up being one of the most revealing insights into how he views working Americans and how little he actually understands or cares about their lives. Not because of any one outrageous moment, but because of how clearly it showed the gap between the man on that stage and the people sitting in the room watching him. A billionaire who has never lived the kind of financial uncertainty that most people face. The kind where you're deciding between buying groceries and paying rent. And he was standing in front of working Americans, many of whom are living paycheck to paycheck, pretending to understand struggles he has never lived, while pushing policies that are actively making their lives harder. He opened by personally taking credit for the large amounts of money that Americans have in their bank accounts. Every single American at every income level has more money in their pockets this week because of the Republican tax policies, he said. And then came the threat. And we got to win the midterms. If we don't, these policies are going to be taken away from you. That's his whole playbook in two sentences. Take credit for what he wants us to believe is true, and then scare us into compliance. Every dollar is because of him. And if you don't vote for him, they'll take it away. It doesn't matter what the people are actually seeing in their own bank accounts, whether the money is there or not. He's telling us a different reality. One he desperately needs us to believe, regardless of what we're actually living through. One where everyone is doing better, where the money is already there, whether we can see it or feel it or not, he wants us to believe that everyone is thriving. And if we're not, then we're the problem. And that's where the real damage of what he's saying happens. Because when the president of the United States declares on camera that every single American at every income level is doing better, and you're sitting at your kitchen table that same night trying to figure out which bill gets paid this month and which one has to wait, you don't think he's lying. You think, what's wrong with me? You think everyone else must have this figured out and you're the one who can't make it work. And maybe you're just not budgeting well enough, or maybe you should be working harder, maybe you should pick up a second job, a third shift, another DoorDash route. The shame settles in quietly and it keeps you from saying anything. Because if everyone else is doing fine, admitting that you're not feels like a personal failure. So you don't talk about it or ask for help. You carry it alone, and so does the person next door, and so does the family down the street, all of them convinced that they are the exception to the prosperity the president just promised is everywhere. And that silence is exactly what he needs. Because the moment people start talking to each other, the moment they sit down and compare notes, everything changes. Because then we all start to realize that millions of families are having the exact same experience. That they're all choosing between gas and groceries, watching their paycheck shrink while prices keep climbing. And the moment that realization sets in, the whole story he just told that room and all of us falls apart. That's what this kind of messaging does. It doesn't just mislead people about the economy, it isolates them from each other. It takes a shared crisis, one created by his tariffs, his war, and his policies, and turns it into millions of individual failures. It breaks the thing he fears most, which is people realizing that they're not alone in this. Communities don't organize when everyone thinks they're the only ones struggling. Families don't fight back when they think the problem is theirs to solve. He doesn't want us comparing notes. He doesn't want us to be in the same room together without him at the front of it telling us what to believe. And when that works, when people are convinced they're alone and that the problem is just theirs, well, then they're easier to control, easier to manipulate, and more likely to vote against their own interests. And the truth is, so many Americans are not okay right now. And it's not their fault. It's not because they didn't work hard enough. It's the result of an economy shaped by his decisions, his tariffs dribbing up the cost of everything from food to fuel, his war sending gas prices to$5 a gallon in the very city where he stood last night, his big, beautiful bill gutting Medicaid and food assistance to fund tax cuts that overwhelmingly benefit the wealthiest people in this country. But instead of admitting any of that, he sat at that table in front of a room full of hardworking Americans and said everything was great. And the ones who know it isn't are too ashamed to say so. Because he just told them they're the only ones. And here's the thing about those dollars. He claimed the average refund this season is over$4,000, and that workers in Las Vegas are seeing refunds of five, six, seven, eight thousand or more. The actual IRS data tells us a different story. The average refund this season is three thousand four hundred and sixty-two dollars, an increase of three hundred and forty-six doll from last year. That's not nothing for working families, but it is a far cry from the windfall he describes. And even that modest increase is being eaten alive. Gas in Las Vegas hit$5.05 a gallon the week, the week before he arrived. Diesel hit an all-time high of$6.39. A congressional report found that Americans are paying 35% more for gasoline since the attacks on Iran began, costing families nationwide$8.4 billion. Nevada's share alone is$83 million. So yes, some workers got a bigger refund. And then they filled their gas tanks and watched it disappear. And where was he sitting when he said all of this? Las Vegas, the city that just recorded a 7.5% annual drop in visitors in 2025. The sharpest decline since record keeping began in 1970, outside of the pandemic, of course. That's 3.1 million fewer people walking through casinos, eating at restaurants, tipping the bartenders, and the bellhops, he was supposedly there to celebrate. The Culinary Workers Union, which represents 60,000 hospitality workers in southern Nevada, has a name for it. Workers are reporting fewer shifts, smaller tips, and hours cut. Caesars Entertainment Group saw Las Vegas profits drop 20%. And while Trump was setting up his roundtable, the Culinary Union and the Nevada State Democratic Party were holding a counter-event across town where hospitality workers describe what's actually happening to their paychecks. The union secretary treasurer named the pattern directly. Workers, he said, are living through what they now call the Trump slump. And it is showing up in their hours and in their paychecks. Joe Spica, a bell man at the Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, who has worked in the industry for years, put it more plainly. Something has to change, he said. And it has to change fast because the policies of the administration are hurting Las Vegas. Senator Jackie Rosen, unable to be there in person, released a video address from Washington, D.C. the same day, calling out the rising costs and the tourism collapse that are hollowing out Nevada's economy under Trump's watch. But Trump didn't mention any of that. He told the room the economy was booming, and then he got to the part where his impulse control slipped. He was reading from his prepared remarks, listing the kind of small businesses that have benefited from his tax cuts. He said restaurants, dry cleaners, corner stores, and then he stopped and he looked up from the paper and said, What is a corner store? I've never heard that term. I know what a corner store is, but I've never heard it described. A corner store? Who the hell wrote that? Please. That's the whole post in one moment. A man who has never set foot in a corner store, who has never had to decide between buying groceries and paying rent, who was born into wealth so vast that$5,000 is a rounding air in his day. Reading words someone else wrote for him about businesses he has never entered, I guess, for people whose lives he has never lived. And he couldn't even get through the script without exposing it. Then came DoorDash Grandma again, aka Sharon Simmons from the McDonald's delivery stunt earlier this week. Trump talked about how beneficial no tax on tips was for her, but again he couldn't control himself. He veered off course, describing the whole thing as it was a little bit, yeah, uh, you know, I mean, to be honest, it was a little tacky. You know, they come up with these crazy ideas like McDonald's. They're a little embarrassing. They're a little tiny embarrassing, but we do them and you win by landslides, admitting out loud just how far he and his administration are willing to go to manufacture moments, spin narratives, and mislead people if it means winning votes. And the story he's been telling about her is carefully constructed. A hardworking grandmother out there delivering food, helped by his policy, lifted up as proof that everything is working exactly as it should. And the more we learn about DoorDash Grandma, the more it appears that Sharon Simmons may have been a part of a moment like this before, brought in to help tell that story. These aren't organic snapshots of everyday life. They're staged, repeated, and designed to create a version of reality that feels good enough to believe. But that story still works because people like her do exist. There are real women in this country spending their later years driving for DoorDash, not because they want to, but because they have to. Taking care of sick spouses, trying to keep up with medical bills, stretching whatever they have left just to make it through the month. That part isn't staged. It is very real. And it's important to say this: any tax saving helps when you're struggling.$11,000,$7,000,$5,000, even$20 is real money. For anyone who has ever lived paycheck to paycheck, who has had an unexpected expense come up, who doesn't have a safety net, that kind of money matters. It can be the difference between paying rent and falling behind. It can mean buying diapers without having to choose which other bill doesn't get paid that month. Not everyone has a safety net to fall back on. And that's why what he is saying is so dangerous. A man who has never faced any level of hardship where those amounts would make a difference is standing up there, acting like he understands how life-changing that money could be in the moment, and then taking credit for it as if it came out of his own pocket. It's not just out of touch, it's deeply disrespectful and disgusting coming from the president of the United States. Especially since he is one of the few people who could actually fix what she was going through. He could make sure that people have health care so someone like Sharon Simmons doesn't have to drive DoorDash to pay for her husband's treatment. He could put safeguards in place so people can spend their later years with their families instead of working just to survive. He has the power to change the system that forces people into these positions in the first place. He just doesn't have the interest. Because these aren't his people. They never were. And then came Officer Cruz Littlefield, a Las Vegas police officer whose wife had just given birth to their first daughter a week ago. He thanked the president for eliminating taxes on overtime and said he had already contacted his CPA to set up a Trump account for his newborn. He was grateful. He sounded genuinely grateful and it showed. But then he said something that cut through the entire performance of that room without him even realizing it. He said that overtime tax cut was helping his family, and I quote, stretch every dollar in an increasingly expensive world. An increasingly expensive world. He said it himself. And he said it while sitting at the table next to the man who helped make it that way. Trump's tariffs raise the cost of everyday goods. His war has sent gas to$5 a gallon in the city where Cruz lives and works. His big beautiful bills slashed Medicaid by hundreds of billions and cut food assistance for the families who need it most. And the tax cuts he's celebrating, they're not making working families wealthier, building anyone's retirement, or creating generational security. They're keeping people's head just barely above water in an economy his own policies aren't drowning them in. The extra money in Cruise's paycheck isn't a windfall, it's a life raft. And the man who threw him into the water is the same one standing there taking credit for the rope. And then Aaron Phillips, a nonprofit founder and mother, thanked Trump for protecting women's sports and said it helps her daughters know they're worth protecting and that they matter. And she's right about her daughters. They are worth protecting and they do matter. But they were never at risk while playing sports. Trump's attack on transgender human beings is just another manufactured culture war used to distract and divide us. But there was a risk and it was sitting close by. The man whose name appeared thousands of times in the Epstein documents was the man she was sitting beside, a man with multiple sexual assault allegations, a man who just this week posted an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus Christ and got into a public feud with the Pope. A man whose administration has stripped reproductive rights, defunded programs that serve women and children, and cut the very social services that protect families like hers. For any parent to sit in proximity to all of that and say their children are being protected is not just ironic. It's the thing that keeps me up at night. Because people are being convinced at something that isn't real, while innocent, harmless, and vulnerable people are being put at real risk, and the divide just keeps growing. Even at an event named after his own policy, the truth was still revealed. His no tax on tips did not magically hide a bad economy, nor did it convince people to care about it more than the things they're actually struggling with. He asked the room to clap for their favorite tax cut. No tax on tips, no tax on social security, no tax on overtime. And when Social Security got the biggest reaction, he laughed and said, So much for no tax on tips. For years, Victor Orban was the model of the behavior and gaslighting that Trump is now famous for. Steve Banning called him Trump before Trump. The Heritage Foundation, the same organization that built Project 2025, described Orban's Hungary as not just a model for conservative statecraft, but the model. Trump praised him publicly, called him a true friend, a winner, a fighter. Orban built exactly what Trump is trying to build here: state media capture, judicial control, crony capitalism, a propaganda machine so complete that truth became contraband. He consolidated power for 16 years. He won four consecutive supermajorities. He looked untouchable. And we now know he wasn't. Hungarians showed up and took back their country. Petar Magyar won in a landslide, and I've been watching what he has been doing closely after his historic win. It's been nothing short of extraordinary. Two mornings ago, he walked into a Hungarian state television studio, the propaganda machine that had banned him from appearing for 18 months, that had lied about his family, that had served as Orban's mouthpiece for 16 years, and he sat down across from them and he said to their faces, what has been happening here since 2010 is something that Goebbels or the North Korean leadership would admire. Not a single true word being spoken. This cannot continue. And he didn't stop there. He told them one element of our program is that this factory of lies will end once a TISA government is formed. The fake news broadcast here must stop. And we will create independent, objective, and impartial conditions to end this propaganda. After the interview, Malgyar posted that the staff at the state broadcasting had been working under constant intimidation and political terror, and that many of them viewed TISA's victory as a form of liberation. He announced that he would suspend their signal until its public service character was restored, and that he would create conditions that rival or exceed BBC standards where opposition politicians under his government would be able to appear on broadcasts to express their views and engage in debate. Every Hungarian deserves a public service media that broadcasts the truth, he said. He didn't shout or grandstand. He sat in a chair, looked them in the eye, and told the truth. That's what the other side of this looks like. Or Bonn gave them the roadmap into authoritarianism. Magyar is giving them the roadmap out. And he's giving it to us too, because if 16 years of consolidated authoritarian power, state media control, rigged electoral systems, and a captured judiciary can be swept away in a single day by voters who decided they'd had enough, then so can this. So can everything that we're going through. A record number of people showed up and said, no more. That's our midterm. That's our November moment. That is what we've been building towards every single night. That is exactly what we are going to do. And that is why I still have hope for America. And you should too. And remember, no matter how dark the days get, I will be here every single day. And together, we will always find hope for America. I'll see you tomorrow.