
WASHINGTON — White House officials began the week scrambling to find a permanent replacement after President Donald Trump fired Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer on Friday following a weaker-than-expected July jobs report and drastic downward revisions of employment for the previous two months. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: The White House is looking for a new Bureau of Labor Statistics chief after President Donald Trump fired Erika McEntarfer and said the agency needs more trust and experience.
Key Points:
Replacing the BLS chief after a jobs report dispute could make workers, voters, and investors trust federal job data less. Less trust can lead to worse hiring, spending, and policy choices.
No clear positive impact identified.
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Fired Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner and the immediate subject of the article’s central personnel dispute.
Central actor who fired the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner and is deciding the replacement.
Leading replacement candidate discussed extensively in the article and publicly commenting on the role.
Named political influencer pushing a specific candidate for the job.
Senior economic adviser named as an influence on the selection process.
Conservative policy organization employing E.J. Antoni and tied to the personnel debate.
Economic consultant quoted offering a critique of the firing and trust in the data.
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Named White House economic official whose views are said to matter in the selection process.
Former Trump campaign adviser quoted on the implications of the personnel decision.
Former Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner quoted reacting to the firing and its consequences.