Trump seizes on U.S. jobs report to
target Democratic economic policies
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[June 04, 2016]
By Amanda Becker and Emily Stephenson
WASHINGTON - Republican presidential
candidate Donald Trump said a U.S. jobs report on Friday that showed the
weakest hiring in more than five years proved that Democratic economic
policies are pushing the country in the wrong direction.
The report gave Trump his biggest opening yet to target Democratic
rival Hillary Clinton on the economy, after months of mostly solid
economic indicators.
“It’s going the wrong way folks. They’ve been kidding themselves,
they’re playing games. It’s going the wrong way," Trump told a rally
in Redding, California.
Clinton, the front-runner to be the Democratic nominee for the Nov.
8 election, has credited President Barack Obama for reviving the
U.S. economy after the 2008 recession but has also said that the
recovery is not over.
In a CNN interview, Clinton acknowledged the figures were
"disappointing to anybody."
"I think President Obama inherited a terrible situation and I’ve
said that repeatedly over the past year and we’ve come a long way
out of the ditch we were dropped into by failed Republican
policies," Clinton told CNN's Jake Tapper.
The unemployment rate in May fell three-tenths of a percentage point
to 4.7 percent, the lowest level since November 2007, but that was
in part due to people dropping out of the labor force. Overall,
nonfarm payrolls increased by only 38,000 jobs in May.
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pledge to build on Obama's work against her to woo working-class
voters in states such as Ohio. The state has lost well-paying
manufacturing jobs and is also a key presidential battleground -
closely competitive because it does not lean heavily Republican or
Democratic.
CLINTON LEADS IN POLL
Clinton, a former secretary of state, is likely to finally clinch
the Democratic nomination over challenger Bernie Sanders on Tuesday
when six states hold nominating contests. One is California, the
most populous U.S. state, with the most Democratic delegates of any
other state and where both candidates have been campaigning heavily.
In a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Friday, some 46 percent of
likely voters said they supported Clinton, while 35 percent said
they supported Trump, and another 19 percent said they would not
support either. The survey of 1,421 people was conducted between May
30 and June 3.
Trump, a real estate developer, has already sewn up the Republican
nomination. In the general election campaign, job creation plans are
expected to be a priority, particularly in states that have been hit
hard by manufacturing-sector job losses.
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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks at a campaign
rally in San Jose, California, U.S. June 2, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy
Nicholson
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Trump has promised to toss out international trade deals to revive
U.S. manufacturing and sweep away a slew of environmental
regulations to bolster the ailing energy sector.
Job creation in the manufacturing and construction sectors fell
sharply in May, according to Friday's jobs report.
Trump has already begun working economic numbers into his stump
speeches. He has said he could put 15 states that have voted for
Democratic presidents in recent elections in play, including
Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan, which have all lost
manufacturing-sector jobs.
Peter Morici, a conservative economist and professor in the business
school at the University of Maryland, said the poor jobs numbers
reflected trends that have driven voter frustration and fueled the
populist campaigns of both Trump and Sanders.
He said Trump needed to add detail to his economic policies, such as
detailing changes to social programs like Medicaid, which provides
healthcare for the poor. "We can't just turn around and cut income
taxes without doing something about those things," Morici said.
Republican strategists agreed that Friday's jobs report created an
opportunity for Trump to differentiate his policies from Obama's or
Clinton's.
"It allows Donald Trump to tout how he would do things differently
as president and focus on some of the job-creation plans that he
has," Republican strategist Ron Bonjean said, adding it would also
allow Trump to talk about his record as a businessman.
Trump has been fleshing out his foreign policy ideas and has
released a tax plan, but he has been light on other details, such as
how he would oversee the U.S. financial system.
(Additional reporting by Chris Kahn in New York; Editing by Leslie
Adler and Alistair Bell)
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