In Rejecting The Jobs Report, Trump Follows His Own Playbook Of Discrediting Unfavorable Data

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in rejecting the jobs report trump follows his own playbook of discrediting unfavorable data

WASHINGTON AP - When the coronavirus surged during President Donald Trump's first term, he called for a simple fix: Limit the amount of testing so the deadly outbreak looked less severe. When he lost the 2020 election, he had a ready-made reason: The vote count was fraudulent.

And on Friday, when the July jobs report revisions showed a distressed economy, Trump had an answer: He fired the official in charge of the data and called the report of a sharp slowdown in hiring "phony."

Trump has a go-to playbook if the numbers reveal uncomfortable realities, and that's to discredit or conceal the figures and to attack the messenger - all of which can hurt the president's efforts to convince the world that America is getting stronger.

"Our democratic system and the strength of our private economy depend on the honest flow of information about our economy, our government and our society," said Douglas Elmendorf, a Harvard University professor who was formerly director of the Congressional Budget Office. "The Trump administration is trying to suppress honest analysis."

The president's strategy carries significant risks for his own administration and a broader economy that depends on politics-free data. His denouncements threaten to lower trust in government and erode public accountability, and any manipulation of federal data could result in policy choices made on faulty numbers, causing larger problems for both the president and the country.

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