Everything Is Glorious
Who's Gonna Buy TikTok?
President Trump Might Have New Jobs for Nearly 90,000 IRS Agents
White People, You are Responsible for High Egg Prices
Feds Round Up Dozens of Tren de Aragua Members in Colorado Raid
Trump to Sign Executive Order Reinstating Service Members Kicked Out of Military Over...
Presidential Approval Poll Has an Interesting Finding When It Comes to Race
Charlie Kirk: Vivek Ramaswamy For Governor of Ohio
Sickening: Over 100 NYC Educators Accused of Having Sexual Relationships, Communications W...
Irish President Manages to Make Holocaust Remembrance Day About Loss of Life in......
Air Force Begins Dismantling DEI Programming
This Teacher Says He's OK with ICE Raiding His School
'A Disruptor': JD Vance Weighs In on Pete Hegseth's Confirmation
Are EU Appeasers Trying to Hinder Trump on Iran?
Monsters Everywhere
Tipsheet
Premium

CNN, CNBC Have Surprisingly Candid Reactions to 'Worst' Jobs Report of Year

There's no sugarcoating the September jobs report. As Spencer noted, nonfarm payrolls only increased by 194,000, falling far below the 500,000 the Dow Jones had estimated. The unemployment rate, meanwhile, fell to 4.8 percent.

While Republicans hammered the "disaster" of a report, CNN and CNBC were blunt in their assessments of the latest figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as well. 

The 194,000 jobs are "way less, way less than anybody expected, and less than last month, and the worst of the year," declared CNN's Christine Romans.

She wasn't alone in finding the number surprisingly low. "Whoa" and "that is real low" were the immediate reactions from a CNBC panel Friday morning. 

"These are just not the numbers that you need to put people back to work," said the network's Steve Liesman. 

Democratic Congresswoman Mikie Sherrill also expressed her disappointment with the report, pointing out how "bad" it was for women. 

"We have seen again and again and again how bad our jobs numbers are for women," she said. "My gosh, in these last jobs numbers, women actually lost 26,000 jobs in the market." 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement