The swamp creatures on Wall Street are finally eating crow. After years of doom-and-gloom predictions about President Trump's economic policies, the financial establishment has quietly embraced what everyday Americans have known all along: Trumponomics delivers results.
According to Breitbart's latest business analysis, we're witnessing a complete transformation of Wall Street's attitude toward the 47th President. The same elites who shrieked about tariffs and "trade wars" during Trump's first term are now singing a very different tune as markets continue their historic climb.
Remember when these same financial "experts" predicted economic catastrophe if Trump won in 2024? Remember the endless fear-mongering about how his policies would crash the markets? Well, Patriots, the results speak for themselves.
The Great Wall Street Awakening
It's almost comical watching the financial press pretend they weren't completely wrong about Trump's vision. These are the same people who spent four years under Biden making excuses for inflation, supply chain disasters, and economic stagnation. Now they're scrambling to rewrite history and claim they always believed in the Trump agenda.
"The market has finally embraced the president's worldview," the Breitbart analysis notes, highlighting how even Trump's harshest critics can't ignore the undeniable success.
This isn't just about stock prices—it's about vindication for the America First movement. While the deep state and their media allies spent years attacking Trump's economic nationalism, working Americans understood the truth: putting America first isn't just good politics, it's good business.
The transformation is stunning. From energy independence to manufacturing revival, from tax cuts to deregulation, every major Trump policy that Wall Street initially resisted has now become conventional wisdom among the very same financial elites who once opposed them.
Of course, don't expect any apologies from these fair-weather supporters. They'll gladly ride the Trump train to profits while pretending they were never standing on the tracks trying to derail it.
The question now isn't whether Trump's economic vision works—the markets have settled that debate. The question is: will Americans remember who stood with them from the beginning, and who only jumped on board when it became profitable?
