The message is clear. President-elect Donald Trump’s “Job One” is to put people back to work.
Lack of jobs and employment opportunities exacerbated the plight of American workers since the Great Recession began in 2008. That deepening anxiety is a primary reason for this year’s political upheaval.
On Nov. 4, the U.S. Dept. of Labor reported the market continues to show signs of gradual strengthening, but analysts cautioned that the gains exclude some workers, including manufacturing and service workers who have lost jobs because of automation.
“We have this pool of long-term unemployed who are really struggling,” said Claire McKenna, a policy analyst at the National Employment Law Project, a labor advocacy group, in a Washington Post story.
The cumulative angst was enough to turn the industrial states of Wisconsin, Michigan, Indiana, Pennsylvania and Ohio to Republican “red” on Nov. 8. It sank Hillary Clinton.