Las Vegas Review-Journal

Politifact

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The statement

“Kanye (West) looks and he sees black unemployme­nt at the lowest it’s been in the history of our country. He sees Hispanic unemployme­nt at the lowest it’s been in the history of our country. He sees (women’s unemployme­nt) the lowest it’s been in now almost 19 years.”

— President Donald Trump, April 26 on “Fox & Friends”

The ruling

Trump turned his sudden friendship with the rapper into a commentary about the economic results on his watch.

Trump has previously made claims of this sort, but it’s been a few months, so we thought we’d take a new look at the numbers.

In March 2018, the African-american unemployme­nt rate stood at 6.9 percent. That’s not a record low, but it’s close — and the record low was 6.8 percent in December 2017, also on Trump’s watch.

The Hispanic unemployme­nt rate was 5.1 percent in March 2018. That’s not a record either, but once again, it’s close.

The Hispanic unemployme­nt rate was as low as 4.8 percent three times in 2017, in June, October and November. Those low points all occurred on Trump’s watch.

Currently, the unemployme­nt rate for women is 4 percent. It was slightly lower during an earlier point in Trump’s presidency — 3.9 percent in October 2017.

The women’s unemployme­nt rate was lower still in December 2000, when it hit 3.8 percent. That falls within the 19-year window Trump cited.

Now, here’s some additional context.

Economists agree that presidents don’t deserve either full credit or full blame for the unemployme­nt rate on their watch. The president is not all-powerful on economic matters; broader factors, from the business cycle to changes in technology to demographi­c shifts, play major roles.

And to the extent that a president does deserve credit for low unemployme­nt, Trump’s predecesso­r, Barack Obama, deserves at least as much as Trump does. The unemployme­nt rate for blacks, Hispanics and women declined dramatical­ly on Obama’s watch as the country pulled out of the Great Recession.

Black unemployme­nt peaked at 16.6 percent in April 2010, when Obama was president. It then fell by more than half to 7.8 percent by the time he left office in January 2017.

Hispanic unemployme­nt, meanwhile, peaked at 13 percent in August 2009, then fell to 5.9 percent at the end of Obama’s term in January 2017.

And unemployme­nt among women peaked at 9 percent in November 2010, before falling to 4.8 percent by the time Obama left office in January 2017, a drop of nearly half.

On balance, we rate this Mostly True.

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