Maybe they expect you to add roadkill and lard
The Trump administration was again blasted for grocery prices this week after Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins discussed the new federal dietary guidelines during a NewsNation appearance.“We’ve run over 1,000 simulations,” Rollins said in a clip
shared on social
media by journalist Aaron Rupar on Wednesday. “It can cost around $3 a
meal for a piece of chicken, a piece of broccoli, corn tortilla, and one other
thing.”
“So there is a way to do this that actually will save the
average American consumer money,” Rollins continued, pushing back against host
Connell McShane’s inquiry about whether the new guidelines expect people to
spend more money on food.
The Guardian noted that “data from the consumer price index, as
referenced by McShane, showed that food prices kept rising in December, increasing by 0.7%, the
biggest month-to-month jump since October 2022. Prices for produce rose 0.5%,
coffee increased by 1.9%, and beef went up 1% over the month and 16.4% compared
with a year earlier.”
Responding to the clip, Chasten Glezman Buttigieg, an
author and teacher married to former Democratic Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg,
said, “Private jets and tax breaks for them and their rich friends, and one
piece of broccoli *AND* a tortilla for you!”
Noting a similarly mocked statement from Donald Trump before the holidays, Civic Media political editor Dan Shafer said: “You will eat one piece of broccoli and your child will have one Christmas toy. This is the Golden Age.”
Other critics, including Democratic lawmakers, used artificial
intelligence programs to generate images of what they called Rollins’
proposed “depression meal.”
Rep. Jason Crow (D-Colo.) said: “Trump gets a gold-plated new ballroom. You get a piece of chicken, broccoli, and one corn tortilla.”
“MAHA!” declared Democrats on the House Ways and Means
Committee, invoking a phrase seized on by Trump after he won the support
of Health
and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy
Jr., “Make America Healthy Again.”
Sharing an edited video clip of Rollins’ interview, Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) said, “What a slap in the face to struggling working families.”
Marlow Stern, who teaches at the Columbia University Graduate
School of Journalism, suggested that
“you should eat prison meals” was “prob not the best message” from the Trump
administration to the public.
The video went viral as the congressional Joint Economic
Committee’s (JEC) Democratic staff on Thursday released a report showing that “a typical American family paid
$310 more for groceries” during the first year of Trump’s second term compared
to 2024.
Some of the biggest estimated jumps in annual cost
documented in the report were for coffee (+$76.06), ground beef (+$70.99), eggs
(+$51.66), candy (+$47.21), potato chips and salty snacks (+$22.59), orange
juice (+$14.18), whole chickens (+$12.51), and chicken breasts (+$11.55). EDITOR'S NOTE: prices listed in the report are based on the yearly average cost Americans spend on each item NOT prices per pound or unit.
“Despite President Trump’s promises that he would lower
grocery costs, families across America are paying higher prices at the cash
register,” said Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-NH), the JEC ranking
member. “This report provides proof of what the American people are
experiencing every day: Costs are too high, and Trump’s policies are only
making them worse.”

