U.S.A. sees 50 years of low unemployment
OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 15:00 PT – Saturday, October 5, 2019
Despite the ongoing trade war with China, unemployment in the United States recently fell to a 50-year low. A September job report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that unemployment fell from 3.7 percent to 3.5 percent in the past month. The data also revealed that about 1[ads1]36,000 new jobs were filled.

National unemployment, job gain and participation from the current employment report.
This is particularly good news for economists who feared tensions with China would put a damper on the US economy. The Wall Street Journal said that job gains and historically low unemployment served as a buffer to the economy and diminished the impact of the trade war.
The White House has attributed these figures to the administration's "pro-growth agenda." They said the agenda gives job creators the framework they need to expand their business and offer more opportunities for workers.
"Thanks to our pro-American agenda, the economy is booming and wages are rising," President Trump said. "3.5 percent – people didn't think they should see it."
The White House concluded by saying that the September report makes it clear that the US labor market is still historically strong.
Our economy is the best in the world, by far. Lowest unemployment ever in almost all categories. Justified for large growth after the trading offers have been completed. Import prices down, China eats tariffs. Help targeted farmers from big tolls coming in. Great future for the United States!
– Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 18, 2019