MaddowBlog-Leading White House economist points to 'employment boom' that clearly hasn't happened
A variety of words come to mind to describe the sharp decline in the Trump-era job market. Boom isnt one of them.
Kevin Hassett, the top economist in the Trump White House, said with a straight face that thereâs been âan employment boom.â
I know I should shrug off such nonsense, but I just couldnât let this go.
www.ms.now/rachel-maddo...
— Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2026-04-09T18:20:51.418Z
https://www.ms.now/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/leading-white-house-economist-points-to-employment-boom-that-clearly-hasnt-happened
During Kevin Hassetts latest appearance on Fox Business, the director of the National Economic Council got an earful from host Larry Kudlow about the state of the economy. (This was, incidentally, a rare instance in which the top economist in Donald Trumps White House from his first term interviewed the top economist in Trumps second term.)
Kudlow to Hassett: "The unemployment rate is 4.3%, for heaven's sake! That's a boom, for God's sake!"
(The unemployment rate was 4% when Biden left office)
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2026-04-08T20:27:16.905Z
....Right off the bat, while its true that a 4.3% unemployment rate is, in historical terms, quite low, its also true that when Trump returned to the White House in January 2025, the same jobless rate was 4%. In other words, nearly a year and a half after the Republican administration got to work implementing its economic agenda, the unemployment rate has gotten worse, not better, making this an awkward subject for Trump loyalists to brag about......
Whats more, the unemployment rate isnt the only relevant metric:
According to the latest data released last week by the Labor Departments Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. economy has added 321,000 jobs over Trumps 15-month second term. Over the previous 15 months, however, the economy added roughly 1.9 million jobs.
A variety of words come to mind to describe such a sharp decline in the U.S. job market. Boom isnt one of them.
Finally, the back-and-forth between Hassett and Kudlow seemed to miss the point entirely.
If the two more recent Republican directors of the National Economic Council want to take a moment to explain why the unemployment rate has gotten worse, or why job growth has slowed so dramatically, theyre welcome to make their best pitch.
Instead, as polls show the public souring quickly on the presidents handling of the economy, the Republican economists pretended that failure deserves to be seen as success. If they hoped such happy talk would impress the American mainstream, theyre likely to be disappointed.