National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow said Friday that former Vice President Joe Biden has 'got to get his facts right' on the Trump economy.

He said the Democratic presidential candidate, whom he considers a friend, is wrong about the effect of the President Trump's policies on the middle class.

'So I think Joe Biden’s got to get this facts right and he might want to reexamine our policies, we’re getting down what we hope to get done,' he said in a Fox Business interview.

National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow said Friday that former Vice President Joe Biden has 'got to get his facts right' on the Trump economy

Kudlow was responding to Biden's claims in his announcement speech that 'the stock market is roaring, but you don't feel it' and the middle class was hurt by the Republican president's tax cut.

The senior Trump adviser claimed afterward, when DailyMail.com asked him about Biden needing to get his facts straight, that he never criticized him in that way.

'No, no, not facts straight,' he contended. 'I happen to be personally a big fan of Joe Biden. I said, all the years on my TV show, I tried to persuade him to be a supply-sider,and I didn't succeed, and so I would ask him to look at the current facts, which raises the whole issue again.'

As far as Americans' feelings about the economy are concerned, he said, 'Yes.'

'The answer is yes, yes and yes. They feel a lot better, they're more confident about their personal finances, high numbers on the polls. The president's economic approval rating, in really all the major polls, is like 58, 60 percent,' he said.

Trump's economic approval rating reached a new high this week, as the unemployment rate dropped to 3.6 percent, a 49-year record low.

A CNN poll published Thursday, before the monthly jobs numbers posted, put Trump's economic approval rating at 56 percent.

It's one of the few issue areas where Trump is in black with most voters.

Acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney marveled at America's economic success under Trump earlier this week saying at an LA forum, 'You hate to sound like a cliché, but are you better off than you were four years ago? It's pretty simple, right?

'It's the economy, stupid. I think that's easy. People will vote for somebody they don't like if they think it's good for them,' he said.

As such, Biden has made it a chief priority to undermine Trump's economic message in his first week as a candidate.

'Look, everybody knows it, you know, middle class is hurting, it's hurting now,' he said in his introductory campaign rally. 'The stock market is roaring, but you don't feel it. There's $2 trillion tax cut last year. Did you feel it? Did you get anything from it? Of course not. Of course not.'

The Democrat claimed, 'All of it went to folks at the top and corporations that pay no taxes.'

He said the middle class is struggling for 'different reasons' but one that stands out to him is that the 'basic bargain used to exist' in America is no longer in effect.

'You contribute to the welfare of the enterprise you work for, you got to share in the benefits and the profits,' he contended. 'Now the only people benefiting when a company does well are the CEOs and the shareholders. The people at the top. Know when people get hurt when a company gets hit by hard times? Our workers. It's a one-way street these days.'

Kudlow said Friday morning, after the release of the April jobs report, which revealed that the U.S. economy created 263,000 new positions last month that 'the strongest growth in jobs has come from the blue collar sector.'

'It is not the upper end, in fact, the wage increases, the bulk of the wage increases, faster wage growth is not the upper end, it’s the blue collar middle class working folks,' he said. 'Not the top one percentile. So I think Joe Biden’s got to get his facts right and he might want to reexamine our policies.'

Trump's top economic adviser said that 'manufacturing is rebounding' and trade deals that are in the works such as the United States-Mexico-Canada agreement will be 'bullish for economic growth and investment.'

'We will see continued surge in auto workers, farmers, manufacturing and so forth and so on but that’s the sweet spot, it’s not the upper end it’s the middle class folks, the working folks, the hard hats, those are the ones I love, I love the hard hats,' he asserted.