On December 23rd, 2025, the Commerce Department released a GDP report that should have dominated every business news cycle for a week.
The U.S. economy grew at a 4.3 percent annualized rate in the third quarter — later revised upward to 4.4 percent. The consensus forecast from economists surveyed by Dow Jones had projected 3.2 percent. The actual number didn’t just beat expectations. It beat them by more than a full percentage point, marking the fastest economic growth pace in two years.
It got a news cycle. Then Christmas arrived. Then the Iran operation consumed everything.
Here’s what Republicans heading into a midterm election year need to understand: voters who don’t hear economic good news don’t know it exists. The GDP number is not self-evident to someone who is also watching gas prices jump 48 cents a gallon because of the Iran war. The two data points create competing signals — and the one that feels like a gut punch at the pump drowns out the one that requires a news article to communicate.
That means the economic story requires deliberate, consistent amplification from every Republican who wants to be in the majority after November.
What the Numbers Actually Say
The Q3 GDP report doesn’t stand alone. It is the headline on a broader economic story that has multiple strong chapters.
Inflation is running at 2.4 percent — down from Biden’s 9.1 percent peak in June 2022, the worst reading since 1981. Blue-collar wage growth has hit its highest level in nearly 60 years, with manufacturing workers on track for $1,300 more in annual earnings, construction workers up $1,400, and mining workers up $2,200. Over $2.7 trillion in private investment has been committed to the American economy since Trump took office. Real personal consumption expenditures grew 3.5 percent in Q3 — Americans are spending, and they’re spending more than they were.
The labor market has some soft spots — unemployment ticked up to 4.6 percent in November — but that figure reflects a deliberate reduction in federal workforce size, not private sector weakness. The private economy is performing.
Put together, these numbers describe an economy that was executing on its core promises heading into the Iran operation: growing faster than projected, delivering wage gains to the workers who needed them most, and attracting the kind of investment that creates jobs that last.
Why This Is a Midterm Story
The generic ballot currently shows Democrats with a 6 to 7 point advantage over Republicans. That gap is being driven primarily by gas price pain and Iran war anxiety — both real, both temporary, both tied to a specific event that will resolve.
What that polling gap does not reflect is any sustained Democratic economic advantage. Biden’s economic legacy is 9.1 percent inflation, $7,400 in annualized purchasing power losses at the peak, and a cost of living that is still elevated from the damage those years did. Trump’s economic record through Q3 2025 is 4.4 percent growth, 60-year wage highs, and 2.4 percent inflation.
The gap between those two economic records is the most powerful argument Republicans have heading into the fall — but only if they make it. Economic arguments do not make themselves. They require candidates who know the numbers, surrogates who repeat them, and a communications operation that keeps them in front of the voters who will decide the 22 competitive House districts that determine the majority.
The Strait of Hormuz will reopen. When it does, gas prices fall and the war anxiety fades from the top of voters’ minds. What remains is the underlying economic record — which is strong. The question is whether Republicans have been building the economic narrative consistently enough that it emerges naturally when the war news cycle ends, or whether they’ll scramble to introduce a story voters are hearing for the first time in October.
4.4 percent GDP growth. 2.4 percent inflation. 60-year wage high. $2.7 trillion in investment.
Learn the numbers. Say the numbers. The midterms are eight and a half months away and the margin is three seats.
