Government Revises Biden-Era Jobs Data Downward by 911,000 in Historic Correction
Here’s the bombshell: The Bureau of Labor Statistics just released the largest downward revision in its history. They’re admitting that 911,000 jobs simply never existed during Biden’s final year in office. Let me get this straight—that’s nearly a million phantom positions used to prop up a failing narrative while American families struggled with reality.
The numbers tell a damning story. Private sector jobs were overcounted by 880,000. Leisure and hospitality? Inflated by 176,000 positions. Professional services? Up by 158,000 fake jobs. Manufacturing? Another 95,000 that never existed. These aren’t rounding errors. They’re lies across the board. They painted a fake picture while we all struggled.
You can’t make this stuff up. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer didn’t mince words either. She said bureau leaders “failed to improve their practices during the Biden administration.” They used outdated methods that made the whole system worthless. She even questioned why they didn’t fix it. Here’s what gets me—how many people took lower-paying jobs thinking better ones were coming?
President Trump wasted no time addressing this betrayal. He fired Biden-appointed BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer. Then he nominated Heritage Foundation economist E.J. Antoni to restore credibility. This decisive action sends a clear message. Manipulating data for political gain? Not on Trump’s watch.
The revision confirms what many Americans felt in their bones. Those glowing economic reports didn’t match reality. While bureaucrats celebrated phantom job growth, real families struggled with rising costs and limited opportunities.
The numbers tell a damning story. Private sector jobs were overcounted by 880,000. Leisure and hospitality? Inflated by 176,000 positions. Professional services? Up by 158,000 fake jobs. Manufacturing? Another 95,000 that never existed. These aren’t rounding errors. They’re lies across the board. They painted a fake picture while we all struggled.
You can’t make this stuff up. Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer didn’t mince words either. She said bureau leaders “failed to improve their practices during the Biden administration.” They used outdated methods that made the whole system worthless. She even questioned why they didn’t fix it. Here’s what gets me—how many people took lower-paying jobs thinking better ones were coming?
President Trump wasted no time addressing this betrayal. He fired Biden-appointed BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer. Then he nominated Heritage Foundation economist E.J. Antoni to restore credibility. This decisive action sends a clear message. Manipulating data for political gain? Not on Trump’s watch.
The revision confirms what many Americans felt in their bones. Those glowing economic reports didn’t match reality. While bureaucrats celebrated phantom job growth, real families struggled with rising costs and limited opportunities.