The March jobs report which showed only 120,000 jobs gained, when roughly 200,000 were expected, was a disappointment and some reason for concern about the recovery, according to The Washington Post.
But on left-wing MSNBC, there were “silver linings,” “good news” and plenty more spin on this economic story.
During
 Martin Bashir’s program the picture on the screen said “Upswing” with 
picture of people in suits. Bashir interviewed journalist and author 
William Cohan who said this month’s data was a “pothole” and that one 
month is less important than the trend.
“The
 last three months we’ve created an average of 212,000 jobs a month, 
which is pretty darn good, and the overall rate of unemployment has come
 down to about 8.2 -- some people have said, ‘well, that’s because 
people have stopped looking for jobs’ -- but look, I think we’re on a 
very solid trend now. As you said, 4 million new jobs in four years, 
that’s something to be pretty proud of,” Cohan said. But neither Bashir,
 nor Cohan pointed out that since February 2009 there has still been a net loss of 740,000 jobs. And the Obama administration has fallen far from keeping its jobs promises.
James
 Pethokoukis wrote for The American that “The Obama Jobs Gap is up to 15
 million missing jobs,” on April 2, 2012. His chart showed that “It
 would take 15 million net new jobs to restore the ratio of employed 
people to total population to where it was in 2007, before the Great 
Recession.” 
But
 those facts didn’t phase MSNBC. MSNBC host and NBC’s Chief White House 
correspondent Chuck Todd made sure to point out that the 8.2 percent 
unemployment rate was a “three-year low,” and interviewed economist Mark
 Zandi who has “provided advice”
 to the Obama adminstration. According to Todd, Zandi is “the person we 
always like to turn to” on jobs report Fridays. No wonder, Zandi 
proposed that the “silver lining” to the report was that state and local
 governments were laying off fewer people.
He
 also supported Obama’s idea that “if state and local government hiring”
 was at the level of private sector hiring, the unemployment rate could 
be as much as a point lower. Todd “dived” into this, again quoted Zandi,
 and said that the rate would be two-tenths of a point lower if we’d 
lost only half of the public sector jobs that we actually lost. Then 
Todd bashed the GOP with a study from Mike Konczal of the left-wing and 
Soros-funded Roosevelt Institute that focused on state jobs cuts in 
states that went red during the 2010 election.
Todd
 bolstered the liberal report that had been published by The Nation 
saying, “ it makes you wonder about the idea that you can promote job 
growth on one hand, while slashing the size of government on the other. 
Do the two go as hand to hand as folks think, maybe Federal level is 
different from state and local?” 
Todd
 also used some of Zandi’s comments about the labor force participation 
rate later in his “Daily Rundown,” to attribute fewer people seeking 
work to retiring baby-boomers and less immigration.
Following
 the Rundown, weekend anchor Alex Witt (filling in for Chris Jansing) 
downplayed Obama’s unemployment record on “Jansing & Co.” by stating
 the rate had “peaked close to 10 percent.” Actually, it peaked at 10 
percent (once revisions were made that lowered it from 10.2). She 
interviewed former Obama green jobs czar, Van Jones, and democratic 
strategist Krystal Ball about the March report. Ball argued that one 
month could be an aberration and suggested the data could be revised 
upward.
That’s
 the same argument Jared Bernstein, former economic adviser to Vice 
President Joe Biden, made during “MSNBC LIVE” when he declared, “one 
month does not a trend make.”
Anchor
 Thomas Roberts introduced the jobs report that hour saying, “There is 
good news for the country this morning, and we’re going to talk about 
the unemployment rate, it did fall once again inching closer to 8 
percent with clear job gains, but it also means some tepid news for the 
Obama administration because of the caveat: those gains fell short of 
expectations.”
Ironically,
 during “NOW with Alex Wagner,” Wagner herself noted that the White 
House was putting a “positive spin” on the underwhelming jobs report. 
Too bad she didn’t acknowledge how much spin her own cable network was 
doing on its own that day.
Wagner
 found a “silver lining” during that segment too. She noted that the 
number of long-term unemployed fell from 5.4 million to 5.3 million and 
then said of part-time workers: “this is a little bit of a silver lining
 fell from 8.1 million in February to 7.7 million.”
During
 “Andrea Mitchell Reports,” the idea was floated that warmer weather had
 increased hiring in earlier months, and viewers were cautioned not to 
focus too much on a single month of data.
Such
 spin is the exact opposite of the way the news media treated presidents
 with an R next to their name. President George W. bush was forced to 
defend 5 percent unemployment, and a 9.4 percent unemployment rate was “good news” under the Obama White House, but “all” bad for President Ronald Reagan.
MSNBC’s
 sister network, NBC, is currently under fire for its coverage of the 
Trayvon Martin story. The Media Research Center has called about 
Congress to investigate Comcast/NBC News for its editing of the George Zimmerman audio, which make it appear Zimmerman was a racist. 
Spin Cycle: MSNBC Excuses Bad March Jobs Report
            April 11th, 2012 11:37 AM
          
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