Under normal circumstances, on the first Friday of the month, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics releases closely watched employment reports that are scrutinized by observers around the world. Lately, however, the circumstances have been anything but normal.
The recent government shutdown began on Oct. 1, which meant the BLS was unable to release job totals from September the morning of Friday, Oct. 3. Similarly, while job numbers from October were supposed to reach the public last week, the public remained in the dark for the same reason.
Now that the longest shutdown in American history is over, is it finally time to turn on the lights, fill in the gaps, and learn about the state of the U.S. job market in the late summer and early fall? Evidently, no. The Washington Post reported:
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Wednesday that key inflation and jobs data for October will ‘likely never’ be released due to the government shutdown. Speaking at a news briefing, Leavitt sought to blame Democrats for the more than 40-day government shutdown, which she said ‘may have permanently damaged the federal statistical system with October [consumer price index] and jobs reports likely never being released.’
She added that, as far as the White House is concerned, the recent economic data that is released will have been “permanently impaired” by the shutdown.
Leavitt: The Democrats may have permanently damaged the federal statistical system with October C.P.I. And jobs reports likely never being released and all of that economic data released will be permanently impaired pic.twitter.com/ApybmBIIAX
— Acyn (@Acyn) November 12, 2025
White House officials soon issued a clarification: Employment data from September, which was collected before the shutdown began, will be released, but the totals from October will probably never see the light of day.








