DETROIT—President Donald Trump will travel to the Motor City Casino and Hotel on Jan. 13 for a 2 p.m. ET speech highlighting his administration’s policies and their impact on the economy.
He will address the Detroit Economic Club—a nonpartisan organization founded in 1934—continuing a tradition of hosting chief executives that dates to President Richard Nixon.
Trump last spoke to the group in October 2024 while on the campaign trail, following an August 2016 delivery before capturing the White House for the first time.
His speech comes one day before the Detroit Auto Show begins, where manufacturers unveil new models and invite the public to peruse their vehicles.
Trump has long championed domestic automobile manufacturing, repeatedly calling for an industry renaissance to revitalize the nation. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act included a temporary provision—allowing for tax credits matching interest paid on American vehicles—to boost the sector.
Top subjects for the president as he takes the stage on Tuesday are record highs in the stock markets and lowering the cost of living for Americans.
Reducing the cost of energy and housing is a priority for Trump, whose policies are “putting money back in Americans’ pockets and making the American Dream more attainable than ever,” according to a statement from the White House emailed to The Epoch Times.
“The progress stems directly from President Trump’s aggressive agenda to restore the American Dream of homeownership,” the White House statement reads, noting the president’s directives to block institutional purchases of single-family homes to lower competition and to guide the federal government to purchase $200 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities to reduce Americans’ borrowing costs.
Trump is also expected to cite recently announced deals with pharmaceutical manufacturing giants that will provide many prescription drugs to Americans at most-favored-nation status.
With the midterms approaching, the president is focused on informing Americans about his economic agenda while drawing distinctions between his leadership style and that of his predecessor and political opponents.







