In response to Friday’s jobs report, which found the U.S. economy added 209,000 in July, Donald Trump’s re-election campaign argued that the figures are “proof that the president has already begun to Make America Great Again.” That, of course, doesn’t stand up well to scrutiny: job growth since Trump took office is actually down a little, not up.
Which is why it was even stranger yesterday, when the Republican National Committee declared that job growth under Trump — 1 million new jobs from February to July — is “unprecedented.”
Perhaps there’s some confusion as to what “unprecedented” means. Let’s revisit the data we discussed yesterday, showing job growth over comparable periods:
February 2017 to July 2017: 1.07 million jobs
February 2016 to July 2016: 1.24 million jobs.
February 2015 to July 2015: 1.37 million jobs
February 2014 to July 2014: 1.51 million jobs
February 2013 to July 2013: 1.17 million jobs
In fact, you can pick pretty much any six-month period from Barack Obama’s second term and find at least a million new jobs — suggesting the RNC may not fully appreciate the not-so-subtle nuances of the word “unprecedented.”
But wait, we can go a little further down this road.









