It was around this time a few months ago when the public first saw the report on April’s job growth. At face value, the numbers looked quite good: 269,000 jobs were created that month, which under normal circumstances, would’ve constituted a terrific total.
But there’s nothing normal about the circumstances, and April’s numbers were a bitter disappointment. Since most analysts expected far more robust growth, Republicans immediately pounced, blaming President Biden and congressional Democrats for the economic setback. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) released this press statement soon after the data was released:
“Today’s disappointing jobs report confirms once again that President Biden’s tax-and-spend policies are bad for American workers, families, and small businesses…. Experts are calling this jobs report the ‘worst miss in 23 years’, and it was a direct result of President Biden’s counterproductive policies. So President Biden is not fixing a crisis, but creating new ones.”
In the days that followed, McCarthy continued to make a direct connection between the White House’s economic agenda and the U.S. job market. A week after April numbers were released, the House GOP leader again argued, “President Biden and Democrats will make excuses for this abysmal reality, but the truth is their own massive spending agenda created this problem.” McCarthy specifically pointed to Democratic unemployment benefits as “one of the main causes of the striking predicament our country has found itself in.”
It wasn’t just McCarthy. The Republican National Committee connected Biden’s policies and job growth over and over and over again.
There was just one small problem with this strategy: it was apparently based on the idea that the U.S. job market would continue to fall short for the indefinite future.
That assumption was shattered on Friday morning, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the U.S. economy created 943,000 new jobs in July and the unemployment rate dropped to its lowest point since the start of the pandemic. Harvard’s Jason Furman, an economist who isn’t prone to exaggeration, said, “I have yet to find a blemish in this jobs report. I’ve never before seen such a wonderful set of economic data.”








