Why the February 2026 Jobs Report Became a Political Story
Key Vocabulary
Listening
Why the February 2026 Jobs Report Became a Political Story
On March 6, 2026 the Bureau of Labor Statistics released the February employment report that showed a notable pullback in hiring. Nonfarm payroll employment decreased by 92,000 in February and the national unemployment rate rose to 4.4%. Average hourly earnings continued to climb, reaching $37.32 an hour, evidence that wage gains have remained firm even as payrolls weakened.
Job losses in February were broad. Health care employment fell by 28,000 positions, and manufacturing payrolls also contracted, shedding about 12,000 jobs. The January figure was revised slightly lower, and revisions for last year have reduced the headline job gains for 2025, a development that some economists say complicates early forecasts for 2026. Labor force participation fell to 62 percent, the lowest since 2021.
Political leaders responded quickly. Democrats blamed President Donald Trump and pointed to tariff-driven uncertainty; a party statement noted that net job gains from May 2025 through February 2026 were -19,000. Republicans and the Labor Secretary, Lori Chavez-DeRemer, sought to limit the political damage, saying record-breaking strikes and bad weather had driven much of February’s weakness while highlighting other measures that remain positive.
Although one month does not define a trend, the report has already become a talking point in the run-up to the midterm elections and could influence public views of the economy. If hiring does not pick up in coming months, candidates from both parties may find themselves answering more questions about jobs and wages. The Federal Reserve may weigh this report when it meets to decide policy later in the month.
Quiz
Reading Practice
Read the article from the Listening section aloud. Your AI teacher will give you pronunciation feedback.
Discussion
Do you follow economic news about jobs where you live? How often?
Have you noticed changes in hiring or pay in your industry recently?
What do you think matters more in elections: jobs numbers or personal costs?
Would you trust a single month of data to judge the economy? Why or why not?
How do you feel when political leaders argue about economic data on TV?