U.S. Job Openings Jump Much Higher Than Expected
A much bigger boost in job openings than expected points to an economy recovery faster than previously thought.

A much bigger boost in job openings than expected points to an economy recovery faster than previously thought.

Business groups are training Americans for jobs because President Trump decided to temporarily block the inflow of foreign contract-workers.

Tens of millions of Americans remain jobless, but all want full-time jobs, mostly as a result of economic shutdowns spurred by the Chinese coronavirus crisis, new unemployment data shows.

Back when Obama was running for president in 2012, Schumer was happy to celebrate smaller gains in employment.

Economists had forecast an addition of around 1.32 million jobs and a decline in the unemployment rate to 9.8 percent.

The ADP number has been wildly offbase in recent months but it tends to get the direction of employment growth right.

Reshoring of jobs to the United States spiked in 2019 to the highest rate, outside the Great Recession period, since at least 2002, though corporations continue offshoring American jobs, research reveals.

Debbie Flood, the owner of a cast bronze architectural hardware manufacturer in Schofield, Wisconsin, blasted Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden’s record on normalizing United States trade with China that she says gutted her business before President Trump ushered in his economic nationalist agenda.

Geno DiFabio, a trucker in Lordstown, Ohio, says only President Trump could have brokered a deal to keep auto jobs in his community after General Motors (GM) idled their plant.

During the second evening of the Republican National Convention (RNC), life-long Democrat Bob Vlaisaljevich, the mayor of Eveleth, Minnesota, said President Trump’s economic nationalist agenda had brought the Iron Range “roaring back to life.”

Joe Biden was right to ad-lib in his August 21 acceptance speech that “there’s not a single thing American workers can’t do.”

President Donald Trump is vowing to expand his pro-American worker agenda through more immigration restriction as Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden offers a vision for a flooded labor market with increased foreign competition.

During the Republican National Convention (RNC) on Monday evening, Donald Trump Jr. said Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden “wants to bring in more illegal immigrants to take jobs from American citizens.”

Donald Trump Jr., President Donald Trump’s eldest son, on Monday ripped into Democrat presidential nominee former Vice President Joe Biden’s economic agenda, saying that the Democrat candidate seems determined to harm American workers.

Trump wants to create more jobs, end Covid-19, defend police officers, end illegal immigration, and stop endless wars.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of laid-off workers seeking U.S. unemployment benefits rose to 1.1 million last week after two weeks of declines, evidence that many employers are still slashing jobs as the coronavirus bedevils the U.S. economy.

Former United States Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis claimed that Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden is the “fighter” that American workers need.

Democrats falsely claim Biden’s plan to re-enter the Paris Climate Accord will “provide meaningful opportunities for workers.”

At least 400 Americans had their identities stolen by illegal aliens who worked at food processing plants in Mississippi that were raided by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency last year.

A majority of undecided voters say they see immigration as a labor issue, supporting reductions to legal immigration in order to protect the United States labor market from cheap, foreign competition, a survey finds.

All across the country, solid majorities of people of all ages, educational backgrounds, and incomes say it is a good idea to get back to work.

President Donald Trump provided Breitbart News during an exclusive Oval Office interview with a six-page document detailing several of his administration’s accomplishments.

President Donald Trump on Wednesday touted a V-shaped economic recovery despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic in the United States.

The JOLTS report suggests restaurants, bars, and hotels expanded hiring in June but manufacturing was a bit weak.

Americans of all races are sharing the pain of the pandemic and the benefits of the rebound.

Economists had forecast an addition of 1.5 million jobs and a decline in the unemployment rate to 10.6 percent.

A sign that the labor market may have strengthened at the end of July.

The Home Depot is opening three facilities in the Atlanta area, and the company is looking for 1,000 people to fill positions in those new outlets.

The labor force participation rate among working class, native-born American men has hit a 20-year low, research shows.

Walmart announced plans Monday to build a $220 million distribution center in Dorchester County, South Carolina.

White House Senior Adviser Ivanka Trump will launch a new ad campaign on Tuesday promoting the value of job training outside of the four-year university college system.

Trump needs a positive economic message, a vision for the next four years based on economic freedom instead of Biden’s taxation and regulation.

The Trump administration’s signature relief program for small businesses came under relentless assault and media-manufactured outrage this week after the Treasury Department released the names of the top borrowers under the Paycheck Protection Program.

The latest data on the jobs market indicates that jobs are still scarce and benefits are not discouraging work.

Indonesian students are preparing to protest the arrival of Chinese workers to the eastern island of Sulawesi next week, the South China Morning Post (SCMP) reported on Thursday.

In the months ahead, the economy will still need extraordinary aid to grow in the face of the pandemic’s destructive force.

Economists had forecast the U.S. adding 3 million jobs in the month.

The overwhelming majority of black Americans say the United States does not need to import more foreign workers to fill jobs, because there is no labor shortage of willing and available U.S. workers.

A total of 5.37 million jobs added in May and June

U.S. employers keep roughly 600,000 foreign H-1B visa workers in jobs throughout the United States, according to an unprecedented report released today by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) agency.
