After Weak Jobs Report, Wires Obsess Over Obama Reelection Impact
To the extent that it was there at all, there was far too little emphasis in yesterday's wire service reporting on yesterday's OMG-awful jobs report (worse than most believe, as will be shown in a later post) was far less on those who continue to be affected -- like, say, the unemployed, under-employed and discouraged, who should be the object of such news stories -- and far too much concentration on what it might mean for President Obama's reelection prospects.
This was noticeable yesterday at Bloomberg, Reuters, and of course at the Associated Press, aka the Administration's Press. Excerpts follow the jump (bolds are mine).
Bloomberg, a wire service which is supposedly strictly business, was the most blatant in headlining the job-growth slowdown as problem for Dear Leader's "re-election momentum" (he had some?):
Obama Re-Election Momentum Hits Snag in April Jobs Report
A slowdown in job growth in April cuts the economic momentum behind President Barack Obama’s re- election bid as he prepares to officially begin campaigning.
U.S. employers added 115,000 workers to payrolls in April, the smallest gain in six months. The unemployment rate dropped to 8.1 percent as fewer people sought work.
... Private payrolls crossed a boundary in April to positive territory during Obama’s term, with a net gain of 35,000 since he took office in January 2009. Total payrolls remain lower than when Obama was inaugurated because there are 607,000 fewer federal, state and local government employees.
That stimulus really did a great job of saving government employee jobs, didn't it?
As to private payrolls finally going positive under Obama's tenure according to the Establishment Survey of businesses -- that's nice, but the results of the separate Household Survey based on interviews with individual households (which is why the numbers don't tie) tells us that since January 2009, the economy is still down by 1.352 million seasonally adjusted full-time jobs and up by 1.08 million part-timers. No, I'm not impressed either.
Reuters also got Obama's reelection prospects into its headline:
Hiring slows, spells trouble for economy, Obama
Employers cut back on hiring in April and more people stopped looking for work, troubling signs for President Barack Obama whose re-election prospects could hinge on his handling of the economy.
Employers added 115,000 workers to payrolls last month, the Labor Department said on Friday. It was the third straight month in which hiring had slowed, intensifying fears the U.S. recovery is losing momentum.
Even a slight drop in the unemployment rate to 8.1 percent had a dark tone because the fall was due entirely to people dropping out of the workforce.
"The bottom line is you don't have evidence that this economy has reached escape velocity," said Robert Tipp, an investment strategist at Prudential Fixed Income.
... The report could rattle nerves at the White House. Weak U.S. growth and high unemployment create a formidable headwind for Obama, who entered office during the darkest days of the 2007-09 recession.
For the record, the recession as normal people define it lasted from July 2008 until June 2009, which the one as the National Bureau of Economic Research has (in my view erroneously) defined went from December 2007 until June 2009.
At the AP, two stories by business writers Christopher Rugaber and Paul Wiseman fretted over Obama's reelection prospects. In the first, In the second, they acted as if a U.S. president can't possibly influence what it takes for job creation to take place, i.e., economic growth:
(6:21 p.m.) Job growth slowed again in April; rate ticks down
... From December through February, employers added 252,000 jobs a month on average. But the figure dipped in March and dropped further in April, raising doubts about an economic recovery that can't seem to reach escape velocity.
The report Friday by the Labor Department indicated "an economy that is losing momentum - especially on the jobs front," said Tom Porcelli, chief U.S. economist at RBC Capital Markets.
It also dealt a blow to President Barack Obama's re-election prospects. His presumed Republican opponent, Mitt Romney, called the report "very disappointing."
(6:21 p.m.) A recipe for more jobs: Stronger economic growth
U.S. job growth slumped in April for a second straight month. It suggested an economy that is growing steadily but still sluggishly, which could further tighten a close presidential race.
Isn't it nice that the press is looking out for Dear Leader's well-being? Actually, no. If a Republican or conservative president were in office, the press would be interviewing the unemployed and finding victims. They were doing exactly that during the Bush Administration when unemployment was below 6%. I don't find touching. That they mostly aren't doing so now quite annoying -- and as if it matters to them any more, quite unprofessional.
Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com.
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Comments
AP had a story the other day...
Submitted by NeoKong on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 4:56pm.
It said that the unemployment rate would be below 8% by election day because their panel of economist said so.
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-250_162-57426882/economists-see-job-growth-p...
After I read it I thought to myself..."Yeah ...no kidding"
What they really meant was that no matter what reality is they are going to report that unemployment has dropped below 8%.
The media will not let that number stand and when it officially goes below the 8% threshold they will collectively shout out how the economy is roaring back and that Obama has saved America.
Guaranteed.
And when Romney wins the
Submitted by Dan The Man 2 on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 5:08pm.
And when Romney wins the press will wonder why unemployment is so high.
No kidding...
Submitted by NeoKong on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 5:14pm.
If he is in office when the economy comes back they will credit Obama's policies too.
wondering if this is true.....
Submitted by JJay on Mon, 05/07/2012 - 10:15am.
http://www.szaboservices.com/show/occidental-college-transcripts-reveals...
Millions upon million of Americans unemployed
Submitted by needle on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 5:12pm.
But the haywires are concerned about only one job: that of the nincompoop-in-chief.
Here's what they should be concerned about: How many families are directly affected by unemployment or underemployment? Mine is. My college graduate son would love to get out of our house, but he has been living with us for 7 years.
- Looking forward to the self-annihilation of the Manipulated Stories Machine.
Only the willfully ignorant get their news from the MSM
Submitted by ohio granny on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 5:24pm.
Only the willfully ignorant get their news from the MSM. That is why the so-called MSM continues to lose viewers and readers. They refuse to report the news in any kind of balanced fashion. They have prostituted themselves to the democrat party.
At some point in the not too distant future they will be totally irrelevant.
It's always about Obama.
Submitted by GregE on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 5:47pm.
Just like in Venezuela I'm sure it's always about Hugo.
It always all about Obama!
Submitted by amazd007 on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 6:13pm.
It's all about Obama's reelection. As Bill Clinton said, if the Navy SEAL's had been killed or captured, it would have been horrible for Obama. Now, hundred's of thousands of workers are unemployed and have stopped trying to find jobs; it's awful for Obama.
Tom,
Submitted by Chris Norman on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 7:02pm.
I've wondered if there have been any investigations (not by the media, of course) that have shown just how many of the formerly unemployed who have actually found jobs are working in their former occupations versus having had to settle for working in new occupations that pay far less than their previous ones. For instance, an engineer who is now working in the retail sector. This would be a different version of "underemployment".
The employment/unemployment reports just don't tell much of the real story and are used by the media merely like the score of a football game to advance Obama's re-election chances. Too, the totally spun "positive" economic news for one month always seems to be quietly revised downward the following month.
There's a frequent question which sums it all up ...
Submitted by Tom Blumer on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 7:22pm.
... uttered by certain employees who are now in new careers at certain employers which are nothing like where they were, usually in positions which pay far less. It is:
What did you do in your former life?
A "reinvention" downward.
Submitted by Chris Norman on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 7:44pm.
A "reinvention" downward. These numbers they use are either distorted, warped upward, or, at the very best, don't tell nearly the full story. When a Republican is in office, the media spin the figures to make them look as dire as possible. When a Democrat is in, the media spin the weakest numbers in an effort to look like great progress is being made.. One problem for them, though - these numbers are reflective of people's actual lives, so we know by our own personal experience that they are either distortions or outright lies. It's like the saying, "If you're going to successfully lie, then lie about something the listener knows nothing about".
Rush nails it again!
Submitted by Slyrr on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 9:41pm.
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/obama-ready-first-campaign-rallies-154719057.html
Rush Limbaugh called it a year ago. He said Obama's campaign would likely boil down to this message: 'We can't afford to change horses in the middle of the stream'. Rush may not be a prophet - but the liberal left makes him LOOK like a prophet by behaving exactly the way he predicts.
And like a puppet dancing on Rush's strings, Obama did exactly what Rush said he would do. He's barfing up tired phrases about how 'things are looking up' and 'looking forward not back' and 'don't take a chance on Romney'.
Sorry, Barry-boy. When the idiot horse is racing towards a waterfall, going to dash itself to pieces on the rocks below, you CHANGE horses in the middle of the stream. And if there isn't another horse to change onto, then you jump into the stream and strike for shore as hard and fast as you can. And you leave the idiot nag to run over that waterfall to die a stupid, moronic doom.
Obama's half-empty stadium is a perfect metaphor for the number of jobs in the country under his failed policies.
Yep
Submitted by GregE on Sat, 05/05/2012 - 9:55pm.
Obama's stream is flooding America.
I now believe there is hope
Submitted by big.league.slider on Sun, 05/06/2012 - 1:34am.
I now believe there is hope for our country. In previous national elections I never recall people I know calling BS on the MSM. But now many of these same people are actually doing some research on what the MSM is reporting regarding statistics like unemployment, federal spending, or the huge disparity in who pays income taxes.
I may have had something to do with their recent change of heart, but I always made a conscious effort to not push my personal political opinions when I talked to them. I was a bit surprised when they came to me and started griping about the state of our federal government.
Go figure.
No wonder the gap is increasing!
Submitted by CobraMan on Sun, 05/06/2012 - 12:32pm.
I keep hearing about how the gap between the rich and the poor keeps increasing. I used to be surprised with hat claim. Well, with at least 150 thousand people who "stopped looking for work" in the last month alone, that gap doesn't surprise me anymore.
Obama's great Economic Plan: adding to poverty, a hundred thousand people at a time.
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court
Or Anwar al-Awlaki.
tax on wages
Submitted by Chuck14 on Tue, 05/08/2012 - 3:24am.
Well, I think it is mistaken to think that unemployment compensation payments are a net inflow of new dollars to the economy. The system is funded by a tax on wages which would otherwise be available to employees. The funds are now replenished by increasing the tax rate when outgoes exceed revenues; thus enlarging current unemployment payouts depresses takehome pay of workers now and in the future. As implemented by this administration, it represents not so much a wage benefit as a perverse and redistributive transfer payment to those chronically denied jobs.