Trump Won't Weigh Americans' Finances in Iran Calls

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- Trump told reporters he won't think about Americans' financial situation "even a little bit" when deciding his next Iran steps, calling prevention of a nuclear weapon his singular focus — a quote one adviser acknowledged is likely to be turned into a Democratic campaign ad.
- Trump's negotiators were closing in on a preliminary deal with Tehran last week before Iran's counterproposal "disregarded Trump's key nuclear demands," leading Trump to deem the position "unacceptable" and threaten a heavy price for Tehran's inflexibility.
- Trump's team is now weighing military escalation, including resuming "Project Freedom" — a Navy effort to break the Strait of Hormuz logjam — or launching a new bombing campaign on Iranian infrastructure, as part of what the White House calls "Operation Epic Fury."
- Iranian officials believe time is on their side and that Trump is sensitive to oil prices and market volatility, a view reinforced by recent gas-driven PPI data and polls showing voters blame Trump and Republicans for the economic pinch.
- U.S. intelligence analyses suggest Iran's economy and oil infrastructure could withstand the American blockade for several months, and Iran's authoritarian system is less responsive to public discontent than a democracy would be.
- U.S. officials told Axios they don't expect Trump to act during his upcoming China trip but believe he could move immediately after; Israeli officials said they'd be on high alert this weekend in case the war resumes in coordination with the Israeli military.
Why it matters: Trump's own advisers concede Iran is "counting on our political calendar" — a six-week ceasefire has failed to produce a deal, gas prices are already spiking, and voters blame Republicans for inflation. Any military escalation risks a swift oil price surge and stock selloff, but standing pat hands Tehran leverage. The Iran file now directly threatens the GOP's midterm message on tax cuts and the economy.



