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The White House’s Side on the Unemployment Numbers and Recovery

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Evans Liberal Politics
July 4, 2010

 

The White House’s Side
on the Unemployment Numbers and Recovery

 

President Obama on June Jobs Numbers: A Positive Six Months, The White House, July 2, 2010, by Jesse Lee, quoted verbatim. Comment by Paul Evans: I thought it was only fair to present the government’s idea of how things have been going as far as any recovery. The jobs numbers aren’t great, but the hemorrhaging has ceased, and any way you look at it, that’s a good thing, right?

Public domain photo of President Obama on the campaign trail, standing in front of a huge American flag

In a month where one might easily be confused by the official jobs numbers, the President followed up on CEA Chair Christina Romer’s excellent explanation this morning by laying down the bottom line:

This morning, we received the June employment report.  It reflected the planned phase out of 225,000 temporary Census jobs.  But it also showed the sixth straight month of job growth in the private sector.  All told, our economy has created nearly 600,000 private sector jobs this year.  That’s a stark turnaround from the first six months of last year, when we lost 3.7 million jobs at the height of the recession.

Now, make no mistake:  We are headed in the right direction.  But as I was reminded on a trip to Racine, Wisconsin, earlier this week, we’re not headed there fast enough for a lot of Americans.  We’re not headed there fast enough for me, either.  The recession dug us a hole of about 8 million jobs deep.  And we continue to fight headwinds from volatile global markets.  So we still have a great deal of work to do to repair the economy and get the American people back to work.

Speaking at Andrews Airforce Base on his way to Charleston, West Virginia for the Senator Byrd’s memorial service, the President also emphasized another key point: the Recovery Act is still in action, and still putting people back to work.  The President took the opportunity to announce yet another component of the “Summer of Recovery”:

Secretary Locke and Secretary Vilsack have joined me here today to announce that the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture will invest in 66 new projects across America that will finally bring reliable broadband Internet service to communities that currently have little or no access.

In the short term, we expect these projects to create about 5,000 construction and installation jobs around the country.  And once we emerge from the immediate crisis, the long-term economic gains to communities that have been left behind in the digital age will be immeasurable.

All told, these investments will benefit tens of millions of Americans — more than 685,000 businesses, 900 health care facilities, and 2,400 schools around the — across the country.  And studies have shown that when communities adopt broadband access, it can lead to hundreds of thousands of new jobs.  Broadband can remove geographic barriers between patients and their doctors.  It can connect our kids to the digital skills and 21st century education required for the jobs of the future.  And it can prepare America to run on clean energy by helping us upgrade to a smarter, stronger, more secure electrical grid.

So we’re investing in our people and we’re investing in their future.  We’re competing aggressively to make sure that jobs and industries and the markets of tomorrow take root right here in the United States.  We’re moving forward.  And to every American who is looking for work, I promise you we are going to keep on doing everything that we can — I will do everything in my power to help our economy create jobs and opportunity for all people.

Now, Sunday is the Fourth of July.  And if that date reminds us of anything, it’s that America has never backed down from a challenge.  We’ve faced our share of tough times before.  But in such moments, we don’t flinch.  We dig deeper, we innovate, we compete and we win.  That’s in our DNA.  And it’s going to be what brings us through these tough times towards a brighter day.

So I want to say happy Fourth of July to everybody.  I want our troops overseas to know that we are thinking of your bravery and grateful for your service.

Amen to that! ~ Paul Evans

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9 comments on “The White House’s Side on the Unemployment Numbers and Recovery

  • I was just doing some web browsing on my Pantech Phone during my free time at work , and I happened across something I thought was interesting . It linked over to your website so I jumped over. I can’t really find the relevance between your site and the one I came from, but your site good none the less .

  • @Marco I know what your saying there . In todays economy its hard to find a job that pays well and is stable . I have found that if you just work hard and are consistent you can succeed. Look at the author of this page , they are clearly hard working and have just been consistent over time and are now enjoying at least what would appear as somewhat of a success. I would encourage everyone to just keep hustling and moving forward.

  • Thank you for the advice. I found your 1st point to be most effective .

  • Thanks for some quality thoughts there. I am kind of new to web surfing, so I printed this off to put in my file, any better way to go about keeping track of it then printing?

  • Hey compañero, realmente tenido gusto este poste. Can’ t parece conseguirlo para dar formato a la derecha en Internet Explorer, se dobla todo para arriba, pero no trabaja muy bien en Firefox tan ninguna preocupación.

  • I can’t figure out how to subscribe to the comments via my reader . I want to keep on top of this, how do I do that?

  • Hey compañero, realmente tenido gusto este poste. Can’ t parece conseguirlo para dar formato a la derecha en Internet Explorer, se dobla todo para arriba, pero no trabaja muy bien en Firefox tan ninguna preocupación.

  • Great points…I would note that as someone who really doesn’t comment to blogs much (in fact, this may be my first post), I don’t think the term “lurker” is very becoming to a non-posting reader. It’s not your fault in the least , but perhaps the blogosphere could come up with a better, non-creepy name for the 90% of us that enjoy reading the posts.

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