Republican lawmakers are expressing alarm and uncertainty over the strength of the U.S. economy after the Labor Department reported Tuesday that the nation had created nearly 1 million fewer jobs from March 2024 to March 2025.
While the data mostly falls during former President Biden’s administration, the report offers further evidence the labor market is struggling.
The monthly jobs report on Friday showed the unemployment rate, though still low, ticked up to 4.3 percent as the economy added only 22,000 jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Many Republicans view President Trump’s global trade war as the biggest reason for weaker-than-expected jobs data, noting that tariffs have increased prices, stifled consumer demand and spooked employers and investors.
While the major stock market indices have reached record highs, Republicans on Capitol Hill worry that doesn’t reflect the economic reality experienced by many Americans.
And they fret that the economic picture could worsen over the next six months heading into the midterm elections.
“My take is that we’re in rough spot. The jobs numbers are low,” said Rep. Don Bacon (R-Neb.). “If you look at industrial jobs, if you look at the farm economy right now — the farm economy is looking pretty bleak.”
“I don’t see where tariffs have helped us yet; I don’t see a lot of corn and soybeans being bought,” he said.
Republicans are showing early resistance to President Trump’s request for a short-term funding bill, which would kick this month’s government shutdown deadline into next year.
Republicans’ One Big Beautiful Bill Act will shrink the size of the U.S. population by hundreds of thousands of people, mostly due to new laws supporting Trump’s immigration crackdown.
The Senate Banking Committee voted along party lines Wednesday to advance the nomination of President Trump’s top White House economist to a stint on the Federal Reserve Board.
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) issued a preliminary report Wednesday detailing its probe of a Delta Air Lines flight that experienced “severe” turbulence in late July, sending more than a dozen people to the hospital.