Tariffs · Debt · Farm Crisis · Groceries · Rent · Interest Rates

We Can't
AffordTrump

Not a campaign. Not a PAC. Just Americans who looked at their receipts and had something to say.

Shop the Collection See the Numbers
WE CAN'T AFFORD TRUMP WWW.WECANTAFFORDTRUMP.COM Vinyl · Weatherproof · UV Resistant
Tariffs cost families $1,745/year National debt hit $39 Trillion 15,000 farms lost in 2025 Fertilizer costs up 15% Food prices up 3.1% Mortgage rates still over 6% $1 Trillion in debt interest this year Crop farmers lost $34.6 Billion Tariffs cost families $1,745/year National debt hit $39 Trillion 15,000 farms lost in 2025 Fertilizer costs up 15% Food prices up 3.1% Mortgage rates still over 6% $1 Trillion in debt interest this year Crop farmers lost $34.6 Billion

What his second term actually costs you.

These aren't projections. These aren't campaign talking points. This is what happened since January 20, 2025 — sourced from the federal government's own data.

$1,745
Tariff Cost Per Family
Feb 2025 – Jan 2026
American consumers paid over $231 billion in tariff costs in Trump's first year back — an average of $1,745 per family. That's a hidden tax on everything you buy.
Source: Joint Economic Committee →
$39T
National Debt
Crossed $39 Trillion — Mar 17, 2026
Added $2.25 trillion in his first year back. The debt now grows at $71,884 per second. Interest alone will exceed $1 trillion this year.
Source: Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget →
$1,000+
Tariff Tax Increase Per Household
2025 — rising to $1,300+ in 2026
The largest US tax increase as a percent of GDP since 1993. Lower-income families are hit hardest — paying a larger share of their income.
Source: Tax Foundation Tariff Tracker →
3.1%
Food Price Inflation
12 months ending Feb 2026
Food prices rose 3.1% year-over-year — above the Fed's 2% target. Beef up 15%. Coffee up 12%. Groceries keep getting more expensive.
Source: BLS Consumer Price Index, Feb 2026 →
6.22%
Mortgage Rate
30-yr fixed, Mar 19, 2026
Still more than double the 2.65% rate in January 2021. The Iran conflict and tariff uncertainty are keeping rates elevated.
Source: Freddie Mac PMMS →
$1.23T
Credit Card Debt
Q3 2025 — record high
Americans owe $1.23 trillion on credit cards — a record. Average APR is over 20%. Families are borrowing to cover basics.
Source: NY Fed Household Debt Report →

Stats last verified: March 2026. Updated monthly from federal sources. Every number links to its source — click to verify.

The numbers don't lie.

National Debt Growth

Trillions of dollars — each bar is a milestone crossed faster than the last

Source: CRFB / Peterson Foundation →

The Trump Tariff Tax

Estimated cost per household by source

Source: Tax Foundation, Yale Budget Lab, JEC →

Who Pays the Tariff Tax?

Lower-income families pay a bigger share of their income

Source: Tax Policy Center →

Family farmers are paying the price.

Trump asked farmers to "bear with me." Here's what bearing with him actually looks like.

$34.6B
Crop Farmer Losses
2025
American crop farmers lost $34.6 billion in 2025, according to the American Farm Bureau. Tariff retaliation closed export markets.
Source: The Hill / American Farm Bureau →
15,000
Farms Lost
2025
15,000 farms went out of business in 2025. Most were small, family operations — not the mega-farms that got the bailout money.
Source: EWG Analysis →
10–15%
Fertilizer Cost Increase
2025 to 2026
Tariffs on imported fertilizer, equipment, and chemicals are driving up the cost of everything farmers need to grow food.
Source: Senate Agriculture Committee Hearing →
40%
Bailout to Mega-Farms
$12B Farmer Bridge Assistance, Dec 2025
Nearly 40% of Trump's $12 billion farm bailout flows to the largest operations. The top 6-8% of farms collect 40%+ of the money. Small farms get crumbs.
Source: EWG / USDA Census of Agriculture →
$28.6B
Ag Trade Deficit
First half of 2025
The agricultural trade deficit hit $28.6 billion in the first half of 2025 alone. Retaliatory tariffs from China and others crushed soybean and grain exports.
Source: Civil Eats / USDA →
192%
Customs Revenue Increase
2025 vs. 2024
The government collected $287 billion in customs duties in 2025 — 192% more than 2024. That money came from American businesses and consumers, not foreign countries.
Source: Yale Budget Lab →

"Farmers are price-takers, not price-makers. Tariffs add another layer of cost at a time when farmers are trying to plan months or even years ahead."

— Nick Levendofsky, Kansas Farmers Union

Stats last verified: March 2026. Updated monthly from federal sources.

Say It Loud.

View All Products →
We Can't Afford Trump Unisex Jersey Tee
Personalizable
Unisex Jersey Tee
Bella+Canvas 3001. 6 colors, S–3XL. Soft, durable, and impossible to ignore. Can be personalized.
We Can't Afford Trump Long Sleeve Tee
New
Long Sleeve Tee
Gildan 2400 Ultra Cotton. 5 colors, S–3XL. Built for cooler weather and hotter takes.
We Can't Afford Trump Embroidered Cap
New
Embroidered Cap
Yupoong 6245CM. White with embroidered front panel, adjustable strap. The anti-red-hat.
We Can't Afford Trump Bumper Sticker
Best Seller
Bumper Sticker
Premium vinyl decal. Weatherproof, UV-resistant, outdoor rated. Ships fast.
We Can't Afford Trump Yard Sign
Statement Piece
Yard Sign
Corrugated plastic, double-sided, wire stakes included. Tell the whole neighborhood.
We Can't Afford Trump Coffee Mug
Most Popular
Coffee Mug
11oz ceramic. Dishwasher safe, microwave safe. Start every morning with the right energy.
We Can't Afford Trump Canvas Tote Bag
New
Canvas Tote Bag
Liberty Bags canvas tote. Sturdy, reusable, and says what you’re thinking at the grocery store.
We Can't Afford Trump Pin Button
Conversation Starter
Pin Button
Wearable protest pin. Pin it to your jacket, bag, or lanyard. Small but loud.

Not a campaign.
Not a PAC.
Millions of Americans
with the same receipt.

Families across the country are making impossible choices — groceries or gas, rent or medication, savings or survival. WeCantAffordTrump.com is a private commercial business. We're not affiliated with any political party, campaign, or PAC. We're a platform for the shared frustration of working people, retirees, renters, and small business owners who are living the economic reality — and want to say so out loud.

Every purchase is a conversation starter. Every bumper sticker on every car is a reminder that this isn't abstract policy — it's the price of eggs, the rent notice, the credit card statement. Millions of Americans already know the feeling. Now they can wear it.

— WeCantAffordTrump.com