And December’s Jobs Report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics – the last one of Joe Biden’s presidency – emphatically put the exclamation point at the end of this tale: 256,000 new jobs burst onto the market while the unemployment rate fell again to 4.1%.
President Joe Biden delivered his farewell address to the nation on Wednesday night. Some of his claims don't check out.
First lady Jill Biden expressed her disappointment with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in a new interview with The Washington Post, providing rare public comments about the fractured relationship between her husband, Joe Biden, and Pelosi following the president’s departure from the 2024 race.
In his farewell address to the nation and in other recent remarks, President Joe Biden has repeated claims that are misleading or need additional context.
President Joe Biden will end his term with a relatively healthy labor market as the U.S. added 256,000 jobs in December and the unemployment rate ticked down to 4.1%.
Exiting President Joe Biden was not without his faults, but American just couldn’t bare to accept him, writes columnist LeBron Hill.
President Joe Biden had good news to deliver in the final jobs report of his administration, which saw jobs growth that defied expectations. Speaking from the Roosevelt Room in the White House on Friday evening, Biden touted the "transformational progress" the economy has made under his watch.
The worst year for job creation under Joe Biden was comparable to the best year for job creation under Donald Trump.
Several economic indicators reveal that the U.S. labor market is showing signs of weakness under President Joe Biden’s administration, despite
As President Joe Biden prepares to leave office, he's leaving behind an extraordinary success story on American job growth, whether Trump admits it or not.
Ahead of President Joe Biden’s planned farewell address Wednesday evening, the Democratic Party is calling attention to the impact his policies have had during his four-year term. “With an unemployment rate under 3% and infrastructure investments of over $20 billion into Wisconsin,
U.S. consumer prices rose in December by less than forecast, a welcome stepdown that helped arrest a deep selloff in bond markets and reinvigorate bets that the Federal Reserve will