President Trump took to Twitter on Saturday to highlight the historic drop in the unemployment rate among African-Americans, a day after the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that the rate fell below 7 percent for the month of December — the lowest mark for black Americans since the bureau began tracking the data in the early 1970s.
"The African American unemployment rate fell to 6.8%, the lowest rate in 45 years. I am so happy about this News! And, in the Washington Post (of all places), headline states, 'Trumps first year jobs numbers were very, very good.' "
The celebratory
tweet
It also came in the midst of a
tweetstorm
According to the latest
BLS
By comparison, unemployment for whites in the month of December was 3.7 percent.
As
NPR reported Friday
During his campaign, Trump ran as a jobs creator — for all Americans.
Kay Coles James, the new president of the conservative Heritage Foundation who is African-American,
tweeted
The president's
Council of Economic Advisers
"The overall unemployment rate, which by October had dropped to 4.1 percent, represented a 17-year low by year's end. The benefits of the low rates were felt broadly, resulting in unemployment rates for America's veterans, African-Americans and Hispanics that reached historic lows in 2017."
White House deputy press secretary Raj Shah went further and praised the president's policies for having a direct correlation to the new low in black unemployment. He
tweeted
"The lowest in nearly 5 decades and a credit to @POTUS economic policies!!"
The record low unemployment rate for African-Americans comes after a year of strained relations between Trump, his administration and many in the black community including the lawmakers on Capitol Hill who represent its interests, specifically the Congressional Black Caucus.
During the first year of his presidency, Trump used the bully pulpit to wade into a number of controversies that some felt were racially charged. Two of the most prominent incidents include referring to NFL players protesting racial injustice during the
national anthem
In early December, Trump's attendance at the opening of a state-sponsored civil rights museum in Mississippi caused controversy, including a highly publicized decision by Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., not to attend the event because Trump would be there. Lewis was a young activist during many of the key moments of the civil rights movement more than a half-century ago, making him an icon of the movement in his own right.
Also, last month, in a closely watched special election in Alabama, African-Americans, including an eye-popping
98 percent of black women
After the highly publicized departure of White House staffer
Omarosa Manigult Newman
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