Chicago Sun-Times

CITING JOBS, TRUMP CLAIMS VICTORY OVER VIRUS, ECONOMIC COLLAPSE

Biden slams prez for saying that Floyd would be ‘saying this is a great thing that’s happening for our country’

- BY STEVE PEOPLES, ZEKE MILLER AND JOSH BOAK

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump effectivel­y claimed victory over the economic crisis and COVID-19 on Friday as well as major progress against racial inequality, heartily embracing a better-thanexpect­ed jobs report in hopes of convincing a discourage­d nation he deserves another four years in office.

In lengthy White House remarks amid sweeping social unrest, a still-rising virus death toll and Depression-level unemployme­nt, the Republican president focused on what he said was improvemen­t in all areas.

He was quick to seize the positive jobs report at a time when his political standing is at one of the weakest points of his presidency less than five months before the general election. Just 2 in 10 voters believe the country is headed in the right direction, a Monmouth University poll found earlier in the week.

The president also addressed the protests, which have calmed in recent days, that followed the death of George Floyd, the black man who died last week when a white police officer knelt for minutes on his neck.

Claiming improvemen­ts everywhere, Trump said, “Hopefully George is looking down right now and saying this is a great thing that’s happening for our country. … This is a great, great day in terms of equality.”

Trump condemned “what happened last week,” said no other president has done as much for black Americans, and declared that an economic rebound was “the greatest thing that can happen for race relations.”

Putting words in the dead man’s mouth drew quick criticism, including from presidenti­al foe Joe Biden, who said it was “despicable.” The Trump campaign said any reports saying Trump was contending Floyd would be praising the economic news were “wrong, purposeful­ly misreprese­nted, and maliciousl­y crafted.”

The president spoke in the Rose Garden after the Labor Department said that U.S. employers added 2.5 million workers to their payrolls last month. Economists had been expecting them instead to slash 8 million jobs in continuing fallout from the pandemic.

The jobless rate, at 13.3%, is still on par with what the nation witnessed during the Great Depression. And for the second straight month, the Labor Department acknowledg­ed making errors in counting the unemployed during the virus outbreak, saying the real figure is worse than the numbers indicate.

Still, after weeks of dire prediction­s by economists that unemployme­nt in May could hit 20% or more, the news was seen as evidence that the collapse may have bottomed out in April.

Friday’s report made for some tricky reaction gymnastics for Trump’s Democratic election opponent, Biden, who sought to contrast the improving figures with the fact that millions of Americans are still out of work. The high jobless rate, he said, is due to the Trump administra­tion mishandlin­g the response to the pandemic.

“Let’s be clear about something: The depth of this jobs crisis is not attributab­le to an act of God but to a failure of a president,” Biden declared in a Delaware speech shortly after Trump spoke.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Donald Trump speaks as he signs the Paycheck Protection Program Flexibilit­y Act on Friday at the White House.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Donald Trump speaks as he signs the Paycheck Protection Program Flexibilit­y Act on Friday at the White House.

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