President Donald Trump is yet again facing a fresh wave of backlash from parts of his own MAGA base after comments about the economic impact of the escalating Iran conflict triggered outrage online ahead of his high-stakes trip to China. Among his most vocal critics was Eric Spracklen from Ohio, who also used to be among his most vocal supporters, but now, the winds have changed.
Spracklen recently reacted to a recent Trump interview prior to his China flight, where Trump was asked whether the rising financial strain on Americans was influencing his approach to negotiations surrounding Iran and the ongoing military tensions in the Middle East. “Not even a little bit,” Trump replied. “The only thing that matters when I’m talking about Iran, they can’t have a nuclear weapon. I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation, I don’t think about anybody.”
Because of the remarks, the Delaware, Ohio-based Spracklen and other MAGA movement members fumed and took to social media to voice their woes. “This is not the same man I voted for. I honestly can’t even recognize him anymore. An absolutely disgusting betrayal,” according to Spracklen.
His post has since gained millions of views, and with more than 21,000 heart reactions on X, supposedly signifying strong approval of his sentiments, presumably from his MAGA followers. With that said, the backlash exposed growing divisions within Trump’s coalition as concerns over inflation, fuel prices, and market instability continue to dominate political conversations ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
MAGA is split over this stance
Some conservatives rushed to defend the president, arguing against the Ohio-born influencer that preventing Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons outweighed short-term economic pain. “I’ll live with the temporary financial burden,” one supporter wrote online, saying national security should come first. “Uh oh…economy takes a little dip…gas is up…I guess we should let Democrats take over and burn the whole damn thing to the ground,” mocked another commenter.
Meanwhile, some social media users could’ve sworn they read similar headlines back in 2016 and were whiplashed by the sense of deja vu they’re now experiencing. “Tons of articles with similar headlines since 2016. Would they still vote for him? Most likely,” says one Reddit user, alluding to how the situation remained the same because people kept voting for Trump.
As for why President Trump is heading to China, he has an ongoing two-day summit with President Xi Jinping with the agenda of stabilizing US-China relations, especially now amid the Iran war. In the past, both in 2018 and 2025, Trump has notably imposed aggressive trade sanctions and tariffs on China.







