The Bureau of Labor Statistics signaled to staff members Monday morning that work would continue as usual at the statistical agency, where President Donald Trump fired the top official Friday over a bleak jobs report.
“Our mission is unchanged - to provide high quality data to the nation,” William Wiatrowski, the agency’s acting commissioner, wrote in an email to all BLS employees obtained by The Washington Post. Wiatrowski was appointed as interim leader Friday.
Trump fired Erika McEntarfer, the top official overseeing employment statistics, after July jobs data showed a major decrease in hiring in the United States and downward revisions on figures from the spring. The move sparked widespread concern among economists and policymakers about the integrity of the data going forward. Trump accused McEntarfer, without evidence, of manipulating closely watched reports for political purposes.
Appointed by President Joe Biden in 2024 for what is usually a four-year term, McEntarfer on Monday wrote her own note to BLS staff members, which Wiatrowski forwarded. In the message, she emphasized the integrity and importance of the agency’s work.
“BLS produces some of the most closely watched economic data in the nation,” she wrote. “Our data moves markets because it is some of the most timely and accurate information on economic conditions that businesses and policymakers have.”
“I sincerely wish my time with you had been longer,” she said.
Trump resumed his attacks on the agency in a Truth Social post Monday, again calling Friday’s jobs report “RIGGED” and adding, with no evidence, that “massive revisions” helped “Radical Left Democrats.” He said he would be picking “an exceptional replacement.”
Trump told reporters Sunday that he would announce a new BLS commissioner “over the next three, four days.”
The BLS is an agency within the Labor Department, with a Senate-confirmed commissioner. McEntarfer was confirmed on an 86-8 bipartisan vote. The agency is independent and produces nonpartisan data on jobs, prices, wages and other topics that is widely utilized, including by the Federal Reserve to set interest rates - as well as the president, Congress and businesses trying to assess the state of the economy.
McEntarfer’s removal has stirred concerns on Wall Street, where analysts and economists warned that such an abrupt shake-up could jeopardize the integrity of the nation’s economic data, potentially undermining sound monetary policy and financial stability. Trump has also been agitating for Fed Chair Jerome H. Powell to cut rates or resign, but experts say the risk of skewing key economic data is as grave as the president’s attacks on the central bank’s independence.
“To borrow from the ‘soft-landing’ analogy, having a flawed instrument panel can be just as dangerous as having an obediently partisan pilot,” JPMorgan Chase’s Michael Feroli noted Sunday.
Rep. Don Bacon (R-Nebraska), a vocal Trump critic who is not seeking reelection, criticized the firing Monday.
“When you start firing people for giving you bad news, then people are hesitant to give you bad news, and then bad things happen,” Bacon told The Post. “We’ve got to work hard to get ground truth.”
McEntarfer’s firing arrived hours after the BLS reported that the job market was far weaker than previously believed. Large cuts to earlier job counts eliminated 258,000 positions originally reported for May and June, marking the steepest two-month downward revision on record outside the pandemic. July figures also fell below expectations, at 73,000 jobs added, highlighting an economy struggling under new tariffs and aggressive immigration restrictions.
Revisions to the jobs reports routinely occur two times after their original printing. Economists said the recent outsize changes from previous months were a reflection of how the government gathers its data. Early versions of the jobs report rely on larger firms that respond quickly, while responses from smaller businesses - often more affected by economic headwinds - filter in later.
The revisions Friday were not the first large corrections to BLS data.
A year ago, the agency reported that the U.S. economy had created 818,000 fewer jobs than it had previously reported from April 2023 through March 2024, marking the largest revision to federal jobs data in 15 years.
That initial annual adjustment was part of a standard process in which the Labor Department updates its monthly payroll survey estimates with more comprehensive - but less timely - state unemployment tax records.
While most revisions are smaller, Friday’s correction to jobs data underscores how initial economic readings are often revised as fuller data becomes available.
As data has been added, job totals have been steadily revised downward in recent months, painting a grimmer picture of the labor market than earlier reports suggested. In June, much of the revision was linked to state and local education jobs, for which numbers dropped dramatically after updated data came in.
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Kadia Goba contributed to this report.
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