Now that gasoline prices have fallen from all-time highs, President Joe Biden is gloating. He is not, however, boasting about how effective his staff is.
The Biden administration, according to a CNN article from last month, “has over 70 people on staff who help create” digital material. Evidently, none of them know how to use spell check.
Biden’s crack team failed to notice that the word “person” was written incorrectly in an infographic in a widely parodied tweet Monday announcing a modest drop in petrol costs.
The tweet itself on Monday wasn’t particularly noteworthy because Biden had spent the weekend boasting about how gas prices had somewhat down from record highs.
Gas prices have declined by an average of 60 cents per gallon over the past 38 days.
Five straight weeks of gas prices coming down.
— President Biden (@POTUS) July 22, 2022
Make that 65 cents down over 40 days. https://t.co/js2oPq5Z1W
— President Biden (@POTUS) July 24, 2022
I grew up in a family where if the price of gas went up, we felt it.
Gas prices have dropped since mid-June and should continue to come down in the days and weeks ahead. I know those extra dollars and cents mean something.
— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) July 24, 2022
Even though those tweets were tone-deaf – gas prices have increased by more than 80% a gallon since Biden took office — at least there were no typos in them.
With a Monday tweet that included an infographic claiming that, with decreasing gas prices, “the average driver will spend $35 less per month for one peson [sic],” his team wasn’t as fortunate.
For American families looking for a little more breathing room, these savings matter. pic.twitter.com/IdDv2JGXAD
— President Biden (@POTUS) July 25, 2022
Twitter community certainly had fun with this.
I am very confident in an administration that spells good. pic.twitter.com/j7dhGoxlsj
— Tim Young (@TimRunsHisMouth) July 26, 2022
The I was omitted from “Louisiana” in a sign behind Vice President Kamala Harris when she visited the Bayou State earlier this month, as several have noted. This was not the only spelling error of this nature to occur under the administration’s watch.
What's a peson?
— Jordan Schachtel @ dossier.substack.com (@JordanSchachtel) July 25, 2022
More on this story via The Western Journal.