Major debate as Trump inflation sees hosts hit Thanksgiving guests with charge

Major debate as Trump inflation sees hosts hit Thanksgiving guests with charge
A person looks at Butterball frozen turkeys, part of Walmart's basket of Thanksgiving goods, for sale at a store in Valley Stream, New York, U.S., November 6, 2025. REUTERS/Kylie Cooper

President Donald Trump likes to claim Thanksgiving costs are down this year, but some holiday hosts are considering extraordinary measures to keep their meals under budget.

The president has claimed costs for this year's meal are down 25 percent, citing a misleadingly priced Thanksgiving meal basket listed online by Walmart, but the Washington Post reported on social media debates over the ethics of charging guests for their dinner.

"Nothing says happy holidays like a cover charge," the newspaper reported.

"With Thanksgiving here soon, you may have noticed online postings by would-be hosts asking whether it is okay to charge guests for their roast turkey and cranberry sauce" the report continued. "But it is part of a larger trend of people billing guests for food and drink that, depending on your point of view, is either a major breach of etiquette or simply pragmatic."

A caller on a recent episode of the “Maney and LauRen Morning Show” recounted that her aunt charges guests $10 each for their meal, which left the radio hosts aghast, and debates broke out on Reddit over a graduate student charging $12 to help pay for turkey at a “Friendsgiving” potluck dinner.

“It’s the inflated price that gets me,” wrote one person who disagreed with charging guests a fee. “That’s way more than a fair contribution to a turkey alone … it’s fair for the friends to contribute, but the way this is presented just looks like friends being asked to pay for a dinner party they were invited to.”

However, not everyone was opposed to charging guests.

“Hosting a dinner can be expensive," one person wrote, "[so] it’s not uncommon to ask people to chip in.”

Consumer costs are rising across the board, and the Post suggested several options for helping to keep costs down for Thanksgiving hosts.

"If you’re tired of being the annual host because of the cost and labor, change the dynamics of your function by hosting a potluck," wrote personal finance columnist Michelle Singletary. "This is often the big cost-saver. Don’t just say: 'Bring something' Be specific."

The columnist also advised serving only three of the most crowd-pleasing side dishes and not cooking enough to provide leftovers, and if the meal is too expensive to serve without charging guests, skip it altogether.

"Just because you have always been the host doesn’t mean you have to accept the duty when you know your finances can’t handle it," Singletary wrote. "As I always say: Live your financial truth. If the truth is that your money is tight, don’t shift the cost to your guests."

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United States District Judge Cameron McGowan Currie dismissed the federal government's indictments against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James, ruling that President Donald Trump unlawfully appointed his personal attorney, Lindsey Halligan, as interim U.S. attorney.

"I agree with Mr. Comey that the Attorney General’s attempt to install Ms. Halligan as Interim U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia was invalid. And because Ms. Halligan had no lawful authority to present the indictment, I will grant Mr. Comey’s motion and dismiss the indictment without prejudice," the judge wrote on Monday.

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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's so-called Department of War threatened to court-martial Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ) after he appeared in a video stating that U.S. troops have a constitutional duty to refuse illegal orders.

"The Department of War has received serious allegations of misconduct against Captain Mark Kelly, USN (Ret.). In accordance with the Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 688, and other applicable regulations, a thorough review of these allegations has been initiated to determine further actions, which may include recall to active duty for court-martial proceedings or administrative measures," the Department of Defense said in a statement on Monday.

"All servicemembers are reminded that they have a legal obligation under the UCMJ to obey lawful orders and that orders are presumed to be lawful," the statement added. "A servicemember's personal philosophy does not justify or excuse the disobedience of an otherwise lawful order."

President Donald Trump has suggested that the Democrats who reminded troops of their duty to refuse illegal orders could be hanged for treason.

"I think it's important to say that there is nothing more American than standing up for the Constitution, that's what we were doing," Kelly told CNN last week. "I think his reaction is just characteristic of a political system that no one is proud of right now."

President Donald Trump is making a fundamental and easily avoidable mistake that's holding back the industrial boom he promised on the campaign trail, according to a report.

The delayed release of September's jobs report showed slightly better than expected job growth, with 119,000 jobs added to the economy, but the data also showed the manufacturing sector lost 6,000 jobs – which means there are now 94,000 fewer people working in American factories than last year ago and 58,000 fewer than when Trump rolled out his tariffs in April, reported Bloomberg.

"It’s certainly fair to ask, why the doomsday scenarios some economists predicted haven’t happened?" wrote correspondent Shawn Donnan. "The main answer being that Trump has rolled back many of his import duties and that other things have been going on such as that AI data center boom."

"It’s also fair to ask, why things haven’t been as good as Trump promised when he imposed tariffs with the goal of seeding an industrial rebirth?" he added. "The main answer being how he has rolled out his levies and what he has targeted."

Trump's steep tariffs on imported steel and aluminum seem to have boosted the primary metals sector, which added 2,300 jobs so far this year, but there's little evidence of the blue collar revival he has been promising since entering politics a decade ago, and the U.S. is actually losing blue collar jobs for the first time since the Covid-19 pandemic.

"In September there were 59,000 fewer people working in manufacturing, construction, mining, logging, transportation and warehousing than there were in September 2024," Donnan reported. "The difference in fortunes between service workers and those in goods-producing industries is stark, especially as senior officials in the Trump administration have talked about reorienting the economy away from Wall Street and services to one in which producing things drives growth."

Goods-producing industries accounted for only 10,000 of the 119,000 jobs added in September, almost entirely in the construction industry that has benefited from the AI data center boom, but his tariffs are actually holding back an industrial boom.

"What he hasn’t excluded from his tariffs is the very machinery and other inputs needed if you want to build a factory," Donnan reported. "In fact he’s threatened to impose more tariffs on industrial machines and robots. Which means that fitting out a new manufacturing plant in the U.S. is significantly more expensive than it was when Trump took office and may become pricier still."

"Trump’s targeting of what economists call intermediate goods amounts to a fundamental mistake if you are trying to encourage an industrial boom," he added.

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