Donald Trump has made it clear he doesn’t care about rules and norms. We can assume that he has seen the report, and based on its contents, Trump decided not to make it public.
By Dean Baker, Center For Economic And Policy Research
Donald Trump refuses to release the September jobs report. While the ostensible reason is the government shutdown that began October 1, two days before the scheduled release date, Trump could decide the release was an essential government function.
Also, according to Erica Goshen, a former commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the release was almost certainly prepared and ready to go by the first. Ordinarily, the president would not see the report until the afternoon before the release, but Donald Trump has made it clear he doesn’t care about rules and norms. We can assume that he has seen the report, and based on its contents, Trump decided not to make it public.

Anyhow, without actually seeing the report, all we can do is speculate. But there is some labor market data coming from private sources, which do give us information.
A friend called my attention to the job listing firm Indeed’s index of job postings. It shows continuing weakening of the labor market.
While all of us have been saying that we are in a low hiring, low firing labor market, where there is little job turnover, that has been true since the spring. What is striking in this graph is that the listing index continues to move downward. The index for the beginning of October was more than 5 percent below the index number at the start of April.
This means that, in order not to have a deterioration in the labor market, we would also have to see a decline in the number of people quitting or being fired of 5 percent. That could be the case; there was a sharp fall in the number of separations BLS reported for August in the JOLTS data. (We don’t have September data.)
However, the monthly data are highly erratic. The average for the last three months (June, July, August) was less than 0.5 percent below the average for the prior three months (March, April, May). This would indicate little change in the firing/quit story to match the decline in hiring shown by the Indeed index.
We should be cautious about making too much of this index. It is useful, but it is just one piece of data, but we have to try to use what is available until Trump chooses to share the government data with the rest of us.
Recent Posts
The Quiet Way Trump Has Made Life Easier For Polluters
March 12, 2026
Take Action Now It’s not just about environmental rollbacks: Trump and Lee Zeldin have presided over a striking decline in the EPA enforcing existing…
Coalition Demands Schumer, Jeffries Step Down Over Failure to Fight ‘War-Crazed’ Trump
March 12, 2026
Take Action Now “Schumer and Jeffries have shown that they cannot be trusted to prevent more wars, more threats of wars, or the transfer of another…
Coalition of Antiwar Groups Launches National Campaign Calling for Jeffries and Schumer to Step Aside from Leadership
March 11, 2026
Take Action Now “Schumer and Jeffries have failed their party and country through wobbly leadership when firmness and clarity are needed in opposing…
The Bases Basis for the Iran War
March 11, 2026
Take Action Now The economic impact of this war — through oil, tourism, and otherwise — is likely to continue to rub Gulf nations’ faces in the…




