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A delay in the reporting of the October employment figures
-- days before voters go to the polls -- could spark more of the political controversy that first surfaced after the September report was released. Former GE chief executive Jack Welch tweeted that the job numbers were "unbelievable" and suggested they had been manipulated. Republican Rep. Allen West of Florida later announced on Facebook that he agreed with Welch. That suggestion was roundly rejected by economists and former officials at the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which issues the report. Democrats and even some Republicans said they also found the charges implausible.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated
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