The health of an economy cannot be assessed by theory alone. It must be tested in practice, and the practice of governing, especially in the economic sphere, requires results. Fortunately, the results now speak for themselves. Under President Donald J. Trump’s renewed leadership, the United States economy is roaring back to life. April’s jobs report confirms it: 177,000 new jobs, across diverse sectors, in defiance of the tepid predictions that preceded it. For the second consecutive month, President Trump has outperformed expectations, not with slogans but with substance.
Let us begin with the facts. The United States economy added 177,000 jobs in April. That figure alone is impressive, but the composition of the growth tells a deeper story. These are not ephemeral or government-created positions designed to inflate statistics. These are real jobs in real industries: 70,000 in private education and health services, 29,000 in transportation and warehousing, 24,000 in leisure and hospitality, 17,000 in professional and business services and 14,000 in financial activities. These numbers reflect not federal edicts but voluntary enterprise, the market at work. They represent American workers doing what they do best when government stops suffocating and starts enabling.
This is where the contrast with President Biden becomes both stark and instructive. Under Biden, job growth was often heralded with great fanfare, yet a closer look revealed that the engine of this growth was the public sector. Federal and state payrolls swelled, buoyed by a flood of post-pandemic spending and trillion-dollar legislative packages misnamed as stimulus. Bureaucracies expanded, but the private sector often stagnated. The supposed recovery was, in large measure, a redistribution project, with Washington acting as employer, financier and regulator all at once. The illusion was job creation. The reality was dependence.
Under President Trump, the pattern is reversed. Private industry is hiring. Government is not. In fact, for the third straight month, the federal government has shrunk. This is not an accounting trick or a seasonal adjustment. It is a deliberate policy, pursued with discipline, to rightsize Washington and return economic power to the people. That the job market continues to grow while the federal workforce contracts is not merely an anomaly. It is a vindication. President Trump is proving that prosperity does not require bureaucracy. On the contrary, it flourishes in its absence.
The labor force participation rate rose alongside job creation. This metric, often overlooked in superficial economic commentary, is essential to understanding the nation’s economic health. Rising participation means that Americans are not only finding jobs but actively seeking them. They believe the effort is worthwhile. They are not being coaxed into the workforce by temporary benefits or coerced by desperation. They are being drawn by opportunity. That is the difference between a managed economy and a dynamic one. Between central planning and capitalism.
Wages are rising. Real average hourly earnings have increased nearly four percent over the past year. These are not nominal gains inflated away by clever accounting. They are real, inflation-adjusted increases. American workers are not just employed. They are earning more, spending more and saving more. It is one thing to promise prosperity. It is another to deliver it in the form of better pay and rising confidence. President Trump has delivered. Biden, despite his claims of empathy for the working class, delivered bloated budgets and inflationary pressure.
A closer examination of industry data illustrates the larger point. Construction has added 11,000 new jobs in April alone, with three straight months of growth. Transportation and warehousing, a vital sector for domestic logistics and reshoring, surged by 29,000 jobs. These numbers are not incidental. They reflect a broader strategic vision: bring supply chains home, invest in domestic production and prioritize national strength over international entanglement. Biden’s America outsourced. Trump’s America builds.
And let us not forget the character of the jobs created. During the Biden era, job gains frequently emerged in sectors bound up with federal largesse: education bureaucracies, public health departments and environmental agencies. Meanwhile, the real engines of growth, manufacturing, construction, energy, were often stymied by red tape, ESG mandates and hostile regulation. It was economic management by press release. Trump’s approach is less theatrical but more effective. Deregulate, incentivize, invest. The results speak for themselves.
The shift is also philosophical. Trump’s job growth is not merely a set of numbers. It is a reassertion of a worldview. In this view, government does not exist to direct economic life but to protect the conditions in which it can flourish. It does not create value, it secures the freedom for others to do so. In trimming federal headcount while expanding employment overall, President Trump is enacting a foundational principle: the government should do fewer things, but do them well. Biden, by contrast, governed as if every problem required another agency, another hire, another taxpayer-funded solution. The result was a government swollen beyond recognition and a private sector gasping for air.
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt put it well: “This is the second month in a row where the jobs report has beat expectations. Wages are continuing to rise and labor force participation is increasing. This is exactly what we want to see. More Americans working for higher wages. More winning is on the way.”
Winning, indeed. Not through programs, but through principles. Not by managing the economy, but by liberating it. Economists like Steve Moore have pointed to the uptick in labor force participation as a true indicator of health, far more telling than any top-line number. Charles Payne identified the transportation surge as a product of reshoring and manufacturing investment, a signal that American industry is back in motion. Maria Bartiromo captured the mood of the markets with characteristic clarity: “It’s going to be the best economy anybody has ever seen.”
Others outside the administration see the trend as systemic. Joel Shulman, CEO of ERShares, noted that American companies are beginning to pull away from dependency on foreign suppliers. Reshoring is not merely a logistics choice. It is a patriotic one. It reflects a confidence that America is worth building in and worth building for. Former Toys “R” Us CEO Gerald Storch sees the same pattern: a return of consumer confidence, corporate investment and strategic hiring.
Of course, critics will try to discredit this progress. They will mutter about seasonal adjustments or cherry-pick slowdowns in this or that subsector. But the deeper truth is becoming harder to ignore. Trump’s critics said his policies would tank the economy. The opposite has occurred. They said tariffs would kill jobs. They did not. They said his immigration crackdown would starve the labor market. Instead, Americans rejoined the workforce. They predicted a crash. They got a boom.
This is not a miracle. It is a model. Trump’s economic success stems not from magic but from method: lower taxes, smarter trade, fewer regulations and an unapologetic preference for American labor. It is, in other words, a conservative vision applied to the real world.
In the end, the labor market is more than a metric. It is a mirror. It reflects what a nation values. Biden’s mirror showed a government-centered economy, swollen with spending and regulation, blind to the private sector’s suffocation. Trump’s mirror reflects something better: an America where people work because they want to, earn more because they can and grow confident in their country again because they see it delivering results.
The April jobs report is not just an economic document. It is a declaration of intent. The president is not tinkering around the edges of the system. He is reclaiming it. He is demonstrating that we do not have to choose between prosperity and discipline, between growth and limited government. We can have both, and we are.
That is the difference between two presidencies. Biden grew the government and hoped jobs would follow. Trump shrank the government and watched jobs multiply. One inflated Washington. The other empowered America.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
Alexander Muse has been delivering sharp conservative headlines and opinion editorials using the amuse on 𝕏 handle since 2007. His in-depth political analysis is available here through American Liberty. His work is read in the White House, the halls of Congress, on K Street, and by prominent Americans, including Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, and Donald Trump Jr. Ranked among the top 200 most-followed Premium 𝕏 accounts, his content drives over four billion impressions annually. Follow him on 𝕏 https://x.com/amuse.
Nestlé announced Monday that it has eliminated artificial colors from all of its food
At American Liberty News, we eschew the mainstream media’s tightly controlled narrative to provide our readers with real news, real insights, and the means to take action. We seek out insightful coverage – and partner with knowledgeable and experienced people and organizations to bring you the information and insight our readers demand.
We humbly seek to provide the tools and information necessary for our readers to decide for themselves what is true and what is right.
The Labor Market Roars Back Under Trump’s Golden Age
The health of an economy cannot be assessed by theory alone. It must be tested in practice, and the practice of governing, especially in the economic sphere, requires results. Fortunately, the results now speak for themselves. Under President Donald J. Trump’s renewed leadership, the United States economy is roaring back to life. April’s jobs report confirms it: 177,000 new jobs, across diverse sectors, in defiance of the tepid predictions that preceded it. For the second consecutive month, President Trump has outperformed expectations, not with slogans but with substance.
Let us begin with the facts. The United States economy added 177,000 jobs in April. That figure alone is impressive, but the composition of the growth tells a deeper story. These are not ephemeral or government-created positions designed to inflate statistics. These are real jobs in real industries: 70,000 in private education and health services, 29,000 in transportation and warehousing, 24,000 in leisure and hospitality, 17,000 in professional and business services and 14,000 in financial activities. These numbers reflect not federal edicts but voluntary enterprise, the market at work. They represent American workers doing what they do best when government stops suffocating and starts enabling.
This is where the contrast with President Biden becomes both stark and instructive. Under Biden, job growth was often heralded with great fanfare, yet a closer look revealed that the engine of this growth was the public sector. Federal and state payrolls swelled, buoyed by a flood of post-pandemic spending and trillion-dollar legislative packages misnamed as stimulus. Bureaucracies expanded, but the private sector often stagnated. The supposed recovery was, in large measure, a redistribution project, with Washington acting as employer, financier and regulator all at once. The illusion was job creation. The reality was dependence.
Under President Trump, the pattern is reversed. Private industry is hiring. Government is not. In fact, for the third straight month, the federal government has shrunk. This is not an accounting trick or a seasonal adjustment. It is a deliberate policy, pursued with discipline, to rightsize Washington and return economic power to the people. That the job market continues to grow while the federal workforce contracts is not merely an anomaly. It is a vindication. President Trump is proving that prosperity does not require bureaucracy. On the contrary, it flourishes in its absence.
The labor force participation rate rose alongside job creation. This metric, often overlooked in superficial economic commentary, is essential to understanding the nation’s economic health. Rising participation means that Americans are not only finding jobs but actively seeking them. They believe the effort is worthwhile. They are not being coaxed into the workforce by temporary benefits or coerced by desperation. They are being drawn by opportunity. That is the difference between a managed economy and a dynamic one. Between central planning and capitalism.
Wages are rising. Real average hourly earnings have increased nearly four percent over the past year. These are not nominal gains inflated away by clever accounting. They are real, inflation-adjusted increases. American workers are not just employed. They are earning more, spending more and saving more. It is one thing to promise prosperity. It is another to deliver it in the form of better pay and rising confidence. President Trump has delivered. Biden, despite his claims of empathy for the working class, delivered bloated budgets and inflationary pressure.
A closer examination of industry data illustrates the larger point. Construction has added 11,000 new jobs in April alone, with three straight months of growth. Transportation and warehousing, a vital sector for domestic logistics and reshoring, surged by 29,000 jobs. These numbers are not incidental. They reflect a broader strategic vision: bring supply chains home, invest in domestic production and prioritize national strength over international entanglement. Biden’s America outsourced. Trump’s America builds.
And let us not forget the character of the jobs created. During the Biden era, job gains frequently emerged in sectors bound up with federal largesse: education bureaucracies, public health departments and environmental agencies. Meanwhile, the real engines of growth, manufacturing, construction, energy, were often stymied by red tape, ESG mandates and hostile regulation. It was economic management by press release. Trump’s approach is less theatrical but more effective. Deregulate, incentivize, invest. The results speak for themselves.
The shift is also philosophical. Trump’s job growth is not merely a set of numbers. It is a reassertion of a worldview. In this view, government does not exist to direct economic life but to protect the conditions in which it can flourish. It does not create value, it secures the freedom for others to do so. In trimming federal headcount while expanding employment overall, President Trump is enacting a foundational principle: the government should do fewer things, but do them well. Biden, by contrast, governed as if every problem required another agency, another hire, another taxpayer-funded solution. The result was a government swollen beyond recognition and a private sector gasping for air.
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt put it well: “This is the second month in a row where the jobs report has beat expectations. Wages are continuing to rise and labor force participation is increasing. This is exactly what we want to see. More Americans working for higher wages. More winning is on the way.”
Winning, indeed. Not through programs, but through principles. Not by managing the economy, but by liberating it. Economists like Steve Moore have pointed to the uptick in labor force participation as a true indicator of health, far more telling than any top-line number. Charles Payne identified the transportation surge as a product of reshoring and manufacturing investment, a signal that American industry is back in motion. Maria Bartiromo captured the mood of the markets with characteristic clarity: “It’s going to be the best economy anybody has ever seen.”
Others outside the administration see the trend as systemic. Joel Shulman, CEO of ERShares, noted that American companies are beginning to pull away from dependency on foreign suppliers. Reshoring is not merely a logistics choice. It is a patriotic one. It reflects a confidence that America is worth building in and worth building for. Former Toys “R” Us CEO Gerald Storch sees the same pattern: a return of consumer confidence, corporate investment and strategic hiring.
Of course, critics will try to discredit this progress. They will mutter about seasonal adjustments or cherry-pick slowdowns in this or that subsector. But the deeper truth is becoming harder to ignore. Trump’s critics said his policies would tank the economy. The opposite has occurred. They said tariffs would kill jobs. They did not. They said his immigration crackdown would starve the labor market. Instead, Americans rejoined the workforce. They predicted a crash. They got a boom.
This is not a miracle. It is a model. Trump’s economic success stems not from magic but from method: lower taxes, smarter trade, fewer regulations and an unapologetic preference for American labor. It is, in other words, a conservative vision applied to the real world.
In the end, the labor market is more than a metric. It is a mirror. It reflects what a nation values. Biden’s mirror showed a government-centered economy, swollen with spending and regulation, blind to the private sector’s suffocation. Trump’s mirror reflects something better: an America where people work because they want to, earn more because they can and grow confident in their country again because they see it delivering results.
The April jobs report is not just an economic document. It is a declaration of intent. The president is not tinkering around the edges of the system. He is reclaiming it. He is demonstrating that we do not have to choose between prosperity and discipline, between growth and limited government. We can have both, and we are.
That is the difference between two presidencies. Biden grew the government and hoped jobs would follow. Trump shrank the government and watched jobs multiply. One inflated Washington. The other empowered America.
If you like my work please consider subscribing: https://x.com/amuse
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
READ NEXT: New GOP Legislation Aims To Strike Down Hidden Constitutional Injustice
Alexander Muse • amuse on 𝕏
Alexander Muse has been delivering sharp conservative headlines and opinion editorials using the amuse on 𝕏 handle since 2007. His in-depth political analysis is available here through American Liberty. His work is read in the White House, the halls of Congress, on K Street, and by prominent Americans, including Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, and Donald Trump Jr. Ranked among the top 200 most-followed Premium 𝕏 accounts, his content drives over four billion impressions annually. Follow him on 𝕏 https://x.com/amuse.
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At American Liberty News, we eschew the mainstream media’s tightly controlled narrative to provide our readers with real news, real insights, and the means to take action. We seek out insightful coverage – and partner with knowledgeable and experienced people and organizations to bring you the information and insight our readers demand.
We humbly seek to provide the tools and information necessary for our readers to decide for themselves what is true and what is right.
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