But virus could slow it down again                                                                  
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July 27, 2020

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Another 930,000 leave unemployment in a week as Trump economy continues rapid recovery—but will the virus get in the way again?
Another net 930,000 Americans left continued unemployment claims the week of July 11, according to the latest unadjusted data from the U.S. Department of Labor as momentum continues to bring millions of Americans back into the labor force. The states with the biggest returns to the labor force were California, Florida and Pennsylvania, with 217,000, 223,000 and 141,000 leaving unemployment claims the week of July 11, respectively. Michigan and Georgia also contributed to the drop in unemployment, falling 99,000 and 97,000 respectively. Since the week ending May 9, unadjusted continuing unemployment claims have dropped from 22.8 million to 16.4 million the week ending July 11, an overall drop of 6.4 million. In the meantime, the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) estimates about 117,000 new COVID-19 cases a day at the moment, still down 53 percent from it late March peak of 253,000 new cases a day. IHME puts daily deaths are at about 851 today, down 63 percent from its April 17 peak of 2,301. Will the temporary spike in cases after bottoming in June be enough to slow down the economy again?

Video: Immigration could be contributing in part to spike in COVID-19 cases in parts of Texas
Governor Greg Abbott of Texas has been accused of re-opening Texas too soon. But a recent spike in COVID-19 in South Texas has other factors including immigration that might be contributing. Hear from a small business owner on what he has seen.

Video: Trump ends the Obama-Biden HUD rule that required communities to rezone by income & race guidelines
President Donald Trump and HUD Secretary Ben Carson have ended a 2015 regulation that conditioned $3 billion of annual community development block grants on rezoning neighborhoods along income and racial guidelines—restoring local control over zoning.

HUD Sec. Carson and President Trump terminate Biden war on suburbs tool
Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning: “Secretary Ben Carson and President Donald Trump have rightly chosen to terminate an Obama era rule that federalized local zoning under the guise of fair housing along income and racial guidelines. This important decision will take federal bureaucrats out of the zoning process as Congress clearly intended when they defunded the zoning portion of the Obama rule in the 2017 omnibus, the 2018 omnibus, the 2019 omnibus, and the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2020. Americans for Limited Government has always urged aggressive enforcement against individual cases of proven racial housing discrimination. However, the Obama administration Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing regulation created an unfair presumption of discrimination based on zoning without any proof beyond Census maps. This was an absurd expansion of federal power and put the most important local government decisions in the hands of those with no stake in the outcome.”



Another 930,000 leave unemployment in a week as Trump economy continues rapid recovery—but will the virus get in the way?

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By Robert Romano

Another net 930,000 Americans left continued unemployment claims the week of July 11, according to the latest unadjusted data from the U.S. Department of Labor as momentum continues to bring millions of Americans back into the labor force.

In the same week, initial unemployment claims came in at about 1.5 million, but with the overall drop in the number of people collection by almost 1 million, that means even more Americans are returning to work. The number translates into 2.4 million who got their jobs back.

There is still a lot of volatility, but the trajectory is clearly on its way down. Continued claims had jumped up the week of July 4 as many Americans came off of extended pandemic unemployment assistance, but then continued on their weeks long downward trajectory a week later.

The states with the biggest returns to the labor force were California, Florida and Pennsylvania, with 217,000, 223,000 and 141,000 leaving unemployment claims the week of July 11, respectively. Michigan and Georgia also contributed to the drop in unemployment, falling 99,000 and 97,000 respectively.

Since the week ending May 9, unadjusted continuing unemployment claims have dropped from 22.8 million to 16.4 million the week ending July 11, an overall drop of 6.4 million.

Overall, in May and June, from 7.8 million to 8.8 million Americans got their jobs back the past two months after labor markets bottomed in April, with millions more expected for the month of July, even as COVID-19 cases are seeing a temporary spike.

The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) estimates about 117,000 new COVID-19 cases a day at the moment, still down 53 percent from it late March peak of 253,000 new cases a day. IHME puts daily deaths are at about 851 today, down 63 percent from its April 17 peak of 2,301.

Two weeks ago, though, IHME was only estimating about 80,000 new cases, and so the rate of reopening could see a pause the second half of July into August, when daily new cases are expected to stabilize and begin dropping through the end of September. A slowdown of reopening may similarly slowdown any economic recovery.

Another headwind could be Congress as it considers another extension of unemployment benefits. But President Donald Trump said on July 21 at a White House press briefing that this time, workers won’t be making more on unemployment assistance than they were making when they were working: “We want to have people go back and want to go back to work as opposed to be, sort of, forced into a position where they’re making more money than they expected to make.  And the employers are having a hard time getting them back to work… The amount would be the same, but doing it in a little bit smaller initial amounts so that people are going to want to go back to work, as opposed to making so much money that they really don’t have to.”

The biggest adjustment in labor markets could be coming in September as many but not all schools begin some form of reopening, giving working families a major boost.

Still, the speed of recovery seems to be surprising almost everyone except for President Trump. On March 25, the President predicted, “I don’t think it’s going to end up being such a rough patch.  I think it’s going to, when we open — especially, if we can open it — the sooner, the better — it’s going to open up like a rocket ship.  I think it’s going to go very good and very quickly.”

Now, the numbers are proving he was right.

But to be sustained will require states finding a way to safely reopen, especially if everyone’s hopes for a vaccine don’t pan out the way we want. The truth is there’s never been an effective vaccine for a coronavirus developed. If we get one this time, it’ll be the first time.

Meaning, the President, Congress and state governors need to be preparing the American people for a reopening scenario where there might not be an effective vaccine in place. The truth is we cannot stay locked up forever, no matter who wins the election in November.

We still need to make certain that as we find a way to mitigate the risk of the virus, the cure is not worse than the disease itself.

Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.

To view online: http://dailytorch.com/2020/07/another-930000-leave-unemployment-in-a-week-as-trump-economy-continues-rapid-recovery-but-will-the-virus-get-in-the-way/


Video: Immigration could be contributing in part to spike in COVID-19 cases in parts of Texas

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To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pyP3g3Supgc


Video: Trump ends the Obama-Biden HUD rule that required communities to rezone by income & race guidelines

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To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V2cTGV06zfc


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HUD Sec. Carson and President Trump terminate Biden war on suburbs tool

July 23, 2020, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement praising HUD Secretary Ben Carson and President Donald Trump for ending the Obama-era Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing regulation and protecting local zoning with a new rule that states “It must be local governments, not HUD, that exercise control of administering local housing policies, including zoning and development policies that are unique to a particular community”:

“Secretary Ben Carson and President Donald Trump have rightly chosen to terminate an Obama era rule that federalized local zoning under the guise of fair housing along income and racial guidelines. This important decision will take federal bureaucrats out of the zoning process as Congress clearly intended when they defunded the zoning portion of the Obama rule in the 2017 omnibus, the 2018 omnibus, the 2019 omnibus, and the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2020.

“Americans for Limited Government has always urged aggressive enforcement against individual cases of proven racial housing discrimination. However, the Obama administration Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing regulation created an unfair presumption of discrimination based on zoning without any proof beyond Census maps. This was an absurd expansion of federal power and put the most important local government decisions in the hands of those with no stake in the outcome.

“Secretary Ben Carson today has ended one of the primary tools that former Vice President Joe Biden was looking to use in his war to abolish the suburbs. Every American owes Secretary Carson and President Trump a great big thank you for standing up both against discrimination and for our local ability to govern our communities.”

To view online: https://getliberty.org/2020/07/hud-sec-carson-and-president-trump-terminate-biden-war-on-suburbs-tool/

 




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