President Joe Biden is weighing how hard to hammer big food companies over painfully high grocery prices in his upcoming State of the Union Address. But some some aides remain wary of focusing too much on food inflation, given how little power the president has to singlehandedly force down prices.
Biden embraced the concept of “shrinkflation” in a Super Bowl message targeting major snack food corporations — as the president framed it, there are now “fewer chips” in your bag, while companies are “still charging you just as much.”
And the White House has been aggressively testing out the messaging on the airwaves and in internal polling ahead of Biden’s speech, according to two White House officials familiar with the matter, who were not authorized to speak on the issue and were granted anonymity to discuss internal conversations. Recent polling circulated within the White House has been favorable to Biden’s push to blast what he’s described on the campaign trail as “corporate greed” driving higher prices across a range of sectors.
I went to BK a few months ago from being too busy and on the road all day. I hadn’t gone in since 2019 when the pandemic started. I got 2 whopper jr’s and I swear they used the $1.00 menu burgers because 1/3 of the bun had nothing at all on them. You had to eat a lot of bare bread to get to the patty. I was still hungry and had to go home and make some real food. I used to go there and get 2 of them, fries and a drink and was full.