What A Day - Trump’s Artificial Economy
Episode Date: February 5, 2026The economy is in pretty much the same weird place it’s been for the past few months. Hiring is down, the cost of living is up, and no one really knows what's coming next. That uncertainty is parti...ally thanks to AI, which is supposed to change work as we know it. It’s making everyone – from stock traders to white-collar workers – very, very nervous. On this episode, we talk to Stacey Vanek Smith. She’s a reporter for Bloomberg Businessweek and co-host of the Bloomberg podcast, Everybody's Business.And in headlines, the Supreme Court signs off on California’s new congressional map, President Trump’s attempted assassin is sentenced to life in prison, and a group of Minnesota teachers and school districts sue to stop immigration enforcement activity on or near public schools.Show Notes: Check out Everybody's Business Call Congress – 202-224-3121 Subscribe to the What A Day Newsletter – https://tinyurl.com/3kk4nyz8 What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcast Follow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/ For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
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It's Thursday, February 5th.
I'm Jane Koston, and this is What Today, the show that appreciates Vice President J.D. Vance for asking right-wing podcast host, Megan Kelly, the important questions.
Like, why wasn't CNN host Caitlin Collins having more fun in the Oval Office Tuesday when she questioned the president about convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's victims?
I mean, like, there was a moment in the Oval Office. I wasn't even in there, but, you know, I was in the West Wing and somebody sent me where he was talking to Caitlin Collins.
who's the CNN anchor.
And I have like a decent relationship with Caitlin Collins,
which is unusual given that she's from CNN.
But the president, she's asking a question.
The president says, why don't you ever smile?
Yeah.
And it's actually like so perceptive,
even if you're asking a tough question,
even if you take your job very seriously.
Like, why does it always have to be so antagonistic?
Well, I laugh because I saw online
everybody who's calling him sexes for saying that.
And I literally said the same thing about Caitlin Collins
a year ago on my show.
She never smiles.
Every once in a while you have to smile.
Roger Ailes used to tell us that.
Every once in a while, you can remember a smile, show the viewers they have a heart.
Just have some fun, right?
J.D. Vance, do you think the sexual assault of young women and girls is fun?
On today's show, can California cheat and gerrymander like Texas can?
The Supreme Court makes its ruling.
And President Donald Trump's quest for immortality could leave us all with a mighty eyesore.
But let's start with the economy, which is in the same weird place it's been for the past few months.
Hiring is down, the cost of living is up, and no one really knows.
what's coming next. And that uncertainty is partially thanks to AI, which everyone says will change
work as we know it. But Trump doesn't seem concerned. He mocked the idea in an interview with NBC
nightly news anchor Tom Yamis, released on Wednesday. Mr. President, there's widespread concern
that AI is going to wipe out a lot of jobs, manufacturing jobs. They said the internet was going to do,
everything was going to do, robots are going to kill jobs. Everything's going to kill jobs.
And you end up, if you're smart, doing great. Comforting. Trump should
probably be taking people's concerns more seriously, because no matter what he says about the economy,
voters have noticed it's not great. In fact, new polling released earlier this week found that a majority
of Americans think the economy under former President Joe Biden was better than the economy under Trump.
And maybe the Trump administration hasn't been exactly helpful on this front. Like the time last year,
Trump told voters they shouldn't buy so many toys for their kids a few weeks before Christmas.
Or when Dr. Memadaz, the Raspberry Ketones enthusiast who somehow runs the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
argue that maybe Americans should actually be working more at a Health and Human Services event Tuesday.
If we could get the average American because they feel healthy, they're vital, they're strong,
they have agency over their future.
They start working a year earlier right out of high school or work a year later, not retire,
or work better during their lifetime because they're healthy,
it would generate about $3 trillion, $3 trillion to the U.S. economy.
That would more than remove the debt.
The U.S. national debt, as of Wednesday, is more than $38 trillion.
So, no.
But like I said, AI is making everyone from stock traders to white-collar workers very, very nervous.
So to find out what's feeling and what's fact in the U.S. economy,
I talked to my friend Stacey Vanek-Smith.
She's a reporter for Bloomberg Business Week and co-host of the Bloomberg podcast, Everybody's Business.
Stacey, welcome back to what a day.
Thanks, Jane. I'm very happy to be here. Good to see you.
New Year, same economic problems. The last time we spoke with you, we talked about this phenomenon called a K-shaped economy. Can you remind me what that is?
Yeah, the key-shaped economy is the idea that for the wealthiest people in the country, that's, I guess, the top of the K, things are getting better and better. They're getting more and more,
money, investments are paying off. And then for most of the country, they're seeing their fortunes
get worse and worse. So the middle is basically disappearing out of the economy. And to be specific
in the U.S. right now, who's the top of the K and who is at the bottom of the K? I mean, the top of the
K is very, very wealthy individuals. So this would be like millionaires and above, the 1%. And they have
been doing really, really well because the stock market has been doing really, really well. And
wealthier people tend to own a lot of stock, and a lot of the stock market has been moving up because of
AI. So they've just seen their wealth increase and increase, but wages haven't really been going up.
And so for people who rely on their wages for their wealth, they are not seeing their fortunes go up.
They are having a harder time affording things because prices are going up faster than their pay.
A lot of things make up our perception of the economy. You mentioned the stock market is doing great.
The job market is mid. Inflation is.
still an issue. We've talked before about how the economy is sometimes powered by vibes. Like,
there's how the economy is doing and how people feel about the economy. What is the issue with the
U.S. economy right now that people are feeling and perceiving the most? I think there's a lack of
balance happening. And it doesn't feel morally right, you know, that an economy is getting richer
and richer and richer and richer. And most of the people in the economy aren't feeling that or are really
struggling. But it's also a big problem for it's not a healthy economy. If people,
aren't feeling good about their ability to get jobs, to get paid, to afford things, that is going to start to
have big implications. Because right now, just the wealthiest few people in the economy are supporting
an enormous amount of buying. And they're not going to be able to do that forever. And once things
start to catch up and people start buying less, that is going to put the economy in a really
tough position. So I just think this lack of balance, in addition to being kind of an ethical
problem, it's showing an economy that's starting to separate in ways that aren't really sustainable.
That is what I see is the biggest problem.
And what gets me is that now data is showing that upper middle class workers that may have been
near the top of the K at one point, the ones in white-collar jobs who have been keeping the economy
afloat with their spending, they are starting to get nervous. Why?
They're starting to get nervous because of AI creep. So this week, there's been something called
the Claude Crash. Clod is one of the artificial intelligence programs that's gotten really popular.
Its parent company Anthropic has released a bunch of sort of plug-ins that you can use in your
computer and they can do all kinds of things for you. And they just did a drop this week that had
all kinds of legal tools. And then I guess quite easily you could see how you could use them
for financial services. So all these stocks and all these companies, law firms, financial services
firms, Salesforce, Thompson-Royter, started to see their stocks go way down because all
the sudden people were like, wait a minute, a lot of which you do can just be replaced by
AI. So I think people are starting to get a sense of how AI is going to potentially take jobs.
Yeah, and it's interesting. So I've seen that also with like software developers. You don't really
need software if you have AI. And the thing is like, we've been hearing the AI is going to
transform work as we know it. The stock market is reflecting a fear that AI,
is going to take away jobs. But is it already actually taking away jobs? Is this kind of premeditated
worrying? That is a really good question. And a little bit nobody knows. I mean, I think there's a huge
fear. Jobs are going away. And maybe jobs are going to be created. A lot of jobs are going to change.
But nobody kind of knows exactly how that's going to show up or how big of a deal that's going to be.
I will say that the company Challenger Gray and Christmas, which is an outplacement firm,
they do a lot of research, said that AI was cited in more than 50,000 layoffs last year.
You know, we just saw a whole bunch of layoffs from Amazon, about 30,000 people recently.
They have mentioned AI too.
So it's not necessarily totally direct, but certainly I think we're going to start to see good, like, high-paying jobs, jobs that, you know, tend to have people working them who live upper-middle-class lives, really taking a hit, potentially losing their jobs, or at least having trouble finding new.
ones. The thing is, Stacey, the job market's been kind of steadily mid for a while now. According to
new data from ADP on Wednesday, private companies only added 22,000 jobs in January. So is the job
market actually bad? Or does it just feel bad? What do we know? I think mid is actually the perfect
word to describe the job market. So on the one hand, we're not seeing huge levels of unemployment. Unemployment is
still below 5%, which historically speaking is quite low. The thing that we are also seeing at the same
time is no hiring. There's kind of a frozen job market right now. Hiring levels are the lowest they've
been in decades. They're calling it a jobs recession because hiring rates are so low. So what that seems
to mean is companies, and there's a lot of speculation as to why this is, some people say it's
because of AI, are kind of in this holding pattern. Like they're not laying a bunch of people off quite yet.
I mean, in some fields, yes, but in many fields, no.
But they're also not hiring.
There's just kind of this weird, frozen feeling in the job market.
As you mentioned, we've seen a few companies make major layoffs, especially Jeff Bezos's companies.
Last week, Amazon cut 16,000 jobs, and then on Wednesday, the Washington Post laid off about a third of its staff.
Bezos is a billionaire.
What is the fact that even his companies are cutting back?
What does that tell us about where the economy is heading?
That's a really interesting question and a really interesting point. I mean, Amazon obviously is doing really well. There are these, you know, seven companies, huge companies. They're called the magnificent seven. And they have basically been leading the charge in the stock market. And Amazon is one of those companies. Amazon has been making money hand over fist. They are doing awesome. So why are they laying people off? They're trying to keep maximizing their profits. They want to keep making more and more and more and more money. So they're not laying people off because times are bad.
but they're laying people off, I think, because they can, which is very worrisome and does show you something about the job market that we're in right now and why workers maybe don't feel great about the economy and the power that they have in the economy because there's a feeling of like, well, we can lay them off, so let's do it.
I feel like it's the exact opposite of how things felt a couple of years ago where it very much was like the job market was so tight that companies were trying to hang on to everybody and they're definitely.
seemed like it was a real workers market in terms of jobs. So now that we're in an economy where
profits are everything and the worker comes last, what should Americans look out for? Because I feel
like historically, this hasn't ended great for everybody. You know, it's interesting. A lot of
people are comparing this to like the industrial revolution. Right. A moment where there's this
huge shift in technology. And so things really start to shift. Some jobs go away. New jobs are created.
but they're not necessarily jobs that people have qualifications for.
It can be a really rough time, especially for workers.
And you're right.
I mean, not that long ago, the job market was so tight that, you know, people were asking for raises.
There was all kinds of job jumping.
We were getting benefits and meditation rooms and working from home benefits and actual raises
and people who are very disadvantaged in the economy, you know, people with like potentially
criminal backgrounds or people who'd taken big breaks to do other things.
things were actually able to reenter the workforce for the first time in a long time. Real wages
started to rise. That period seems to be over right now. And it does seem like companies have a lot of
the power again. And I think there's a big worry that AI will mean companies have even more of the
power going forward because they don't necessarily need workers to do the things they can do. They can
experiment with having AI do certain jobs. At the same time, obviously new jobs will be created as this
technology involves, and us as workers, people in the economy, you know, we can use AI as assistance and things like that too. So it's a little bit mixed, but it's a little scary to be a worker right now.
Stacey, as always, thank you for joining me.
Thank you, Jane. It's good to see you.
That was my conversation with Bloomberg Businessweek reporter Stacey Vanek-Smith.
We'll link to her podcast in our show notes.
Hear that. The rest of the show is fully baked and ready to go. But it's piping hot. So in the meantime,
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slash wad. Here's what else we're following today. Head aligns. The result of that, Katie,
however, means that both Texas's map and California's map will stand. And politically, the projection is
that they will even each other out or cancel each other out.
MS Now, senior legal reporter Lisa Rubin, reacted Wednesday to the Supreme Court signing off
on California's new congressional map.
The decision swats down, please, from California Republicans and the Trump administration
to throw it out.
In December, the Supreme Court ruled that Texas could use a Republican-friendly, racially
gerrymandered map.
That's despite a lower court ruling that the map was, well, just that.
A quick reminder how we got here.
Last year, Texas' maps were redrawn to flip up to full.
five Democratic seats Republican. Shady as hell, right? So then California Democratic
Governor Gavin Newsom responded with a tit-for-tat map designed to flip up to five Republican seats
Democratic. And of course, Republicans threw a tantrum and made the exact same accusations of racist
gerrymandering against the California map and voila. Here we are in the middle of a redistricting
arms race in the lead-up to the midterms. What a fun journey we're all on.
The man convicted of trying to assassinate President Trump at a Florida golf course in 2024 was sentenced Wednesday.
Florida federal district court judge Eileen Cannon described Ryan Ruth's plot as, quote, deliberate and evil.
The West Palm Beach incident happened roughly two months after Trump was injured in another assassination attempt at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Ruth received life in prison without parole, plus seven years for a gun charge, which I'm sure he's really torn up about.
The sentencing had been scheduled for December, but the judge delayed it after Ruth decided to hire a lawyer for that phase of the case.
This after representing himself at trial, which obviously went great, as it always does.
A group of teachers and school districts in Minnesota filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security,
immigration and customs enforcement, and related officials on Wednesday.
According to the Teachers Union Group, Education Minnesota, the lawsuit seeks to block both DHS and I,
ICE from conducting immigration enforcement activity on or near public schools.
In a press release, the group argues, quote,
recent federal actions have disrupted education, endangered students, and driven families away from classrooms.
Education Minnesota President Monica Byron, who he heard on the show last week, spoke about
the suit at a press conference.
The Code of Ethics for Minnesota Educators states, quote,
A teacher shall make reasonable effort to protect the student from conditions harmful to health
and safety, unquote. Although it pains me to say this, one of the greatest threats to the health and safety of
Minnesota's school-age children right now are the ICE and Border Patrol agents in our state.
Of course, the administration sent DHS spokesperson Trisha McLaughlin to push back. She said in the statement
to the Washington Post, quote, ICE is not going to schools to arrest children. We are protecting
children, end quote. Protecting them by arresting them, and their parents. Meanwhile,
Trump border czar Tom Homan made his own separate announcement on Wednesday. He told reporters
that more officials in Minnesota were cooperating with federal immigration enforcement and
given this increase in unprecedented collaboration, and as a result of the need for less law
enforcement officers to do this work in a safer environment, I have announced effective immediately.
We will draw down 700 people effective today.
700 law enforcement personnel.
Hey, 700 is not nothing.
A win is a win.
Homan says that leaves around 2,000 officers in the state.
President Trump plans to install a statue of Christopher Columbus on White House grounds,
according to sources who spoke with the Washington Post.
The piece is a reconstruction of a Columbus statue pushed into Baltimore's harbor by protesters in 2020.
Trump's reasoning for putting up a statement,
of a man who never actually reached America and was put into prison by the Spanish monarchy
for being such a terrible person?
The Italian vote.
As Trump told reporters last month, quote,
Remember when you go to the voting booths?
I reinstated Columbus Day.
He didn't.
It's the latest in Trump's major kick to reimagine the White House and cement an American legacy
preferable to him.
And who better to immortalize than Trump himself?
Trump's latest vision?
A 250-foot triumphal arch that towers over the Lincoln Memorial from across Washington
Potomac River and stands almost as tall as the U.S. Capitol. The height is no coincidence.
According to the Washington Post, it's an homage to America's 250th anniversary. This would also be
the tallest arch in the world. Arc de Triomph? Meet your gauche American cousin, Le Arc de Trump.
And that's the news. Before we go, when federal agents show up at a voting office, it's not just
Georgia's problem. It's everyone's. This week on Runaway Country, Alex Wagner talks to
Fas Shakir to unpack the FBI's ballot investigations, Trump's role, and what it means for fair elections
heading into the 26 midterms. Listen to a runaway country now, wherever you get your podcasts, or on YouTube.
That's all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe. Leave a review. Celebrate the
Spanish figure skater who will now be allowed to perform his minions-inspired short program at the
Olympics after dealing with copyright issues and tell your friends to listen. And if you're into
reading, and not just about the six-time Spanish national champion finally
getting permission from Universal Music to do the routine, which features a dance sequence to
minions saying the word papaya with an EDM beat, like me. Whataday is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe. I'm Jane Koston. And honestly,
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