Trump fires top labor official over jobs report, says numbers ‘a scam’


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Summary

BLS dismissal

President Donald Trump fired Erika McEntarfer, the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics and a Biden appointee. Trump accused her of falsifying job numbers prior to the November election.

Job numbers controversy

The latest jobs report showed that the US economy added 73,000 jobs in July, and revisions to May and June data reduced the previously reported growth by 258,000.

Calls for transparency

Kevin Hassett, President Trump's top economic adviser, supported the decision to fire the BLS head, highlighting the size of the revisions. He criticized the current process as too opaque and called for more transparency and new leadership at the BLS.


Full story

President Donald Trump has defended his decision to fire the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) after the latest jobs report, released Friday, Aug. 1. The July numbers showed the economy added just 73,000  jobs, and revisions to May and June wiped out 258,000.

BLS commissioner out: Trump

The president fired BLS commissioner Erika McEntarfer, a Biden appointee, last week, accusing her of falsifying job numbers prior to the November election. He said she would be replaced by someone “much more competent and qualified.”

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Speaking to reporters on Sunday, Aug. 3, the president accused the BLS of manipulating data to undercut him.

“If you remember, just before the election, this woman came out with these phenomenal numbers on Biden’s economy. Phenomenal numbers. And then right after the election, they announced that those numbers were wrong. And that’s what they did the other day. So it’s a scam in my opinion.”

McEntarfer responded to the news of her termination on Friday, Aug. 1, posting to Bluesky that holding the position has been “the honor of my life.”

It has been the honor of my life to serve as Commissioner of BLS alongside the many dedicated civil servants tasked with measuring a vast and dynamic economy. It is vital and important work and I thank them for their service to this nation.

— Erika McEntarfer (@erikamcentarfer.bsky.social) August 1, 2025 at 9:18 PM

Latest job numbers

Friday’s job report numbers showed the economy is not doing as well as previously reported. The BJS originally reported that 291,000 jobs were added in May and June. Friday’s report, however, corrected that number to just 19,000.

Trump’s top economic adviser, Kevin Hassett, backed the president’s move on Fox News Sunday. He said the downward revisions were the biggest in five decades and deserved far more transparency.

“When I first saw the big revisions, which, by the way, were the largest revisions going all the way back for 50 years if we exclude the COVID years, when I saw those revisions, I thought it must be a typo,” said Hassett.

“If I were running the BLS and I had the biggest downward revision in 50 years, I would have a really, really detailed report explaining why it happened so that everybody really trusted the data. ‘We had this move, that move, that move. We had a bunch of people get their responses in late,’ or something like that. But instead, they have this little black box that moves the numbers around and makes people wonder, sometimes with partisan patterns, and I think what we need is a fresh set of eyes at the BLS,  somebody who can clean this thing up.”

Republicans question Trump’s decision

Not every Republican is on board.

Republican Sens. Rand Paul, Thom Tillis, and Cynthia Lummis have questioned whether firing McEntarfer was the right decision, suggesting the move could backfire politically.

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Why this story matters

President Donald Trump's firing of the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner following weaker-than-expected jobs data raises questions about the independence of federal statistical agencies and public trust in official economic reporting.

Government data integrity

Multiple sources note concerns that dismissing the head of a statistical agency over job numbers may undermine trust in the objectivity and reliability of government economic data.

Political interference

The president's action, justified by unproven claims of data manipulation, highlights worries among experts about potential partisan influence on federal agencies structured for nonpartisan reporting.

Labor market uncertainty

The unexpectedly low job growth and significant downward revisions to prior months reflect broader economic challenges and policy impacts, with potential consequences for economic confidence and future policymaking.

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Behind the numbers

The July jobs report showed the US economy added only 73,000 jobs with a sharp downward revision of 258,000 jobs for May and June. This marks the weakest three-month hiring pace since the pandemic recession in 2020.

Community reaction

Economists, policymakers and advocacy groups widely expressed concern over the firing, with many warning it could erode trust in federal economic data and create uncertainty for businesses and investors who rely on accurate statistics.

Context corner

The Bureau of Labor Statistics is designed to provide monthly employment data independently of political influence and its statistics are widely regarded as a gold standard for economic measurement. Political interference in such agencies is rare in U.S. history.

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Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

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Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left sharply frame Trump’s firing of the Labor Statistics commissioner as a reactionary “meltdown” to a “grim,” “weak” and “bad” jobs report, portraying Trump as punishing the “messenger” and avoiding accountability.
  • Media outlets in the center maintain a fact-driven tone, highlighting market impacts without emotionally charged language.
  • Media outlets on the right emphasize the commissioner’s status as a “Biden holdover” and echo Trump’s claims that the “numbers were RIGGED,” using rhetoric like “faked jobs numbers” and “massive downward revision” to suggest deliberate data manipulation, thus justifying the firing as restoring integrity.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • U.S. employers added only 73,000 jobs in July, with job gains for previous months revised down significantly, according to the Labor Department's report.
  • President Donald Trump fired Erika McEntarfer, head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, after alleging that job figures were manipulated for political reasons.
  • Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer confirmed McEntarfer's dismissal, stating that Bill Wiatrowski will serve as acting director of the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
  • The unemployment rate increased to 4.2%, as noted in an employment report that showed a slowdown in hiring amid rising economic concerns.

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Key points from the Center

  • On Aug. 1, 2025, President Donald Trump dismissed Erika McEntarfer, who was serving as the head of the agency responsible for compiling U.S. employment data, following the release of a disappointing jobs report in Washington, D.C.
  • Trump accused McEntarfer of manipulating employment data to benefit Democrats, citing a 258,000-job downward revision in May and June without providing evidence.
  • The Labor Department reported only 73,000 jobs added in July, below the expected 115,000, and unemployment rose to 4.2%; this followed sharp hiring revisions down from May and June.
  • Economists and officials warned that firing McEntarfer threatens trust in government data, with William Beach calling it a "dangerous precedent," and Larry Summers likening it to authoritarian tactics.
  • The firing increased uncertainty for businesses amid ongoing tariff-driven economic challenges and could pressure the Federal Reserve to consider earlier interest rate cuts to support the weakening labor market.

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Key points from the Right

  • President Donald Trump fired Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer after the agency reported only 73,000 jobs added in July, significantly lower than expectations.
  • Trump accused McEntarfer of manipulating job numbers for political purposes, claiming she overstated jobs growth to benefit the Biden administration.
  • Sen. Elizabeth Warren criticized the firing, suggesting it was an attempt to dismiss negative job data.
  • The Bureau of Labor Statistics revised previous job gains down by a total of 258,000 jobs for May and June, indicating a weaker economy than previously reported.

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