Business
Trump’s BLS nominee floats ending monthly jobs report


President Donald Trump’s nominee to lead the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has proposed ending releasing the aency’s closely watched jobs report each month.
Conservative economist EJ Antoni, a longtime critic of the bureau, floated the idea in an interview with Fox News published online on Tuesday.
The idea raised new alarm over the agency’s future and the reliability of its statistics, which are used by political leaders, investors and everyday Americans to get a sense of how the world’s richest country is faring.
Trump fired its former leader this month after the agency reported a sharp slowdown in jobs growth.
Trump accused the commissioner, Erika McEntarfer, of having “rigged” the numbers – a claim that was widely rejected by economists.
They likewise panned his pick of Antoni, saying his economic commentary was rife with basic mistakes.
After Fox published its interview online on Tuesday, an economist who has advised Republicans in the past posted: “Senators who vote to confirm Antoni are voting to essentially eviscerate the BLS and its jobs data.”
“The articles and tweets I’ve seen him publish are probably the most error-filled of any think tank economist right now,” Jessica Riedl, a senior fellow at another conservative think tank, the Manhattan Institute, also wrote on social media.
Antoni, a federal budget analyst at the Heritage Foundation, is a longtime critic of the BLS. He has called its statistics “phoney baloney” and last year urged the Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) “to take a chainsaw to the BLS”.
In the Fox interview, he said the jobs report, which includes the country’s unemployment rate, the number of jobs created over the last month, and other data, was unreliable.
“It’s a serious problem that needs to be fixed immediately,” Antoni told Fox News digital in an interview conducted before Trump named him to lead the BLS,
“Until it is corrected, the BLS should suspend issuing the monthly job reports but keep publishing the more accurate, though less timely, quarterly data,” he added.
White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said on Tuesday that it was “the plan and the hope” that the BLS continues publishing monthly jobs reports, but repeated criticism of the agency’s statistics.
“We need to look at the means and the methods of how the BLS is acquiring this very important data,” she said. “The goal of course is to provide honest and good data for the American people.”
The fight over the BLS comes at a time of heightened debate over the US economy and to what extent significant new tariffs will drive up prices for businesses and consumers and slow growth.
The most recent reports from the BLS showed jobs growth slowing sharply, with prices continuing to rise, although at the same pace as last month.
Private companies also conduct surveys to gauge inflation and hiring but they are seen as less reliable than the government data.
The Trump administration has taken other steps to reduce longstanding – and sometimes basic – government functions.
His education secretary, Linda McMahon, has pledged to dismantle the department she leads, while Lee Zeldin, head of of the Environmental Protection Agency, has refocused his agency’s mission on deregulation, recently announcing a plan to scrap a landmark finding that greenhouse gases are harmful to the environment.
Business
Trump asks US Supreme Court to uphold his tariffs after lower court defeat

President Donald Trump has asked the US Supreme Court to overturn a lower court decision that found many of his sweeping tariffs were illegal.
In a petition filed late on Wednesday, the administration asked the justices to quickly intervene to rule that the president has the power to impose such import taxes on foreign nations.
A divided US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit last week ruled 7-4 that the tariffs Trump brought in through an emergency economic powers act did not fall within the president’s mandate and that setting levies was “a core Congressional power”.
The case could upend Trump’s economic and foreign policy agenda and force the US to refund billions in tariffs.
Trump had justified the tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), which gives the president the power to act against “unusual and extraordinary” threats.
In April, Trump declared an economic emergency, arguing that a trade imbalance had undermined domestic manufacturing and was harmful to national security.
While the appellate court ruled against the president, it postponed its decision from taking effect, allowing the Trump administration time to file an appeal.
In Wednesday’s night’s filing, Solicitor General John Sauer wrote that the lower court’s “erroneous decision has disrupted highly impactful, sensitive, ongoing diplomatic trade negotiations, and cast a pall of legal uncertainty over the President’s efforts to protect our country by preventing an unprecedented economic and foreign policy crisis”.
If the Supreme Court justices deny the review, the ruling could take effect on 14 October.
In May, the New York-based Court of International Trade declared the tariffs were unlawful. That decision was also put on hold during the appeal process.
The rulings came in response to lawsuits filed by small businesses and a coalition of US states opposing the tariffs.
In April, Trump signed executive orders imposing a baseline 10% tariff as well as “reciprocal” tariffs intended to correct trade imbalances on more than 90 countries.
In addition to those tariffs, the appellate court ruling also strikes down levies on Canada, Mexico and China, which Trump argues are necessary to stop the importation of drugs.
The decision does not apply to some other US duties, like those imposed on steel and aluminium, which were brought in under a different presidential authority.
Business
Hermes Testing expands probe solution business amid AI-driven semiconductor demand

Hermes Testing, a testing solutions provider under Hermes Epitek, is leveraging its machine engineering services and customized equipment manufacturing to address growing demand in advanced semiconductor testing driven by AI industry growth. The company…
Business
Google told to pay $425m in privacy lawsuit

A US federal court has told Google to pay $425m (£316.3m) for breaching users’ privacy by collecting data from millions of users even after they had turned off a tracking feature in their Google accounts.
The verdict comes after a group of users brought the case claiming Google accessed users’ mobile devices to collect, save and use their data, in violation of privacy assurances in its Web & App Activity setting.
They had been seeking more than $31bn in damages.
“This decision misunderstands how our products work, and we will appeal it. Our privacy tools give people control over their data, and when they turn off personalisation, we honour that choice,” a Google spokesperson told the BBC.
The jury in the case found the internet search giant liable to two of three claims of privacy violations but said the firm had not acted with malice.
The class action lawsuit, covering about 98 million Google users and 174 million devices, was filed in July 2020.
Google says that when users turn off Web & App Activity in their account, businesses using Google Analytics may still collect data about their use of sites and apps but that this information does not identify individual users and respects their privacy choices.
Separately this week, shares in Google’s parent company Alphabet jumped by more than 9% on Wednesday after a US federal judge ruled that it would not have to sell its Chrome web browser but must share information with competitors.
The remedies decided by District Judge Amit Mehta emerged after a years-long court battle over Google’s dominance in online search.
The case centred on Google’s position as the default search engine on a range of its own products such as Android and Chrome as well as others made by the likes of Apple.
The US Department of Justice had demanded that Google sell Chrome – Tuesday’s decision means the tech giant can keep it but it will be barred from having exclusive contracts and must share search data with rivals.
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