White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett speaks with reporters in the driveway outside the West Wing of the White House in Washington, DC, U.S., March 19, 2025.Â
Kevin Lamarque | Reuters
National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett on Sunday defended President Donald Trumpâs sudden decision to fire the Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner, without citing specific evidence.
Hassett repeatedly pointed to the revisions in Fridayâs employment data to justify Trumpâs firing of BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, but did not provide data showing the latest jobs report was ârigged,â as Trump claimed.
âI mean, the revisions are hard evidence,â he said on NBC News, adding that there âhave been a bunch of patterns that could make people wonder.â
Revisions are common in jobs report data, as the initial estimate often becomes more precise as additional payroll data becomes available in subsequent months. The data is dependent on surveys of employers, and some businesses may not file their data by the initial reporting deadline.
Trump on Friday fired McEntarfer, accusing her of manipulating the jobs numbers for political purposes after the latest report included downward revisions to job growth data for two previous months.
Hassett argued that the revisions are a âhistorically important outlier,â saying they raise broader doubts about the data.
He also rejected claims that Trump was âshooting the messengerâ for the weaker-than-expected jobs numbers.
Instead, he said, the president âwants his own people there,â suggesting that the data would be âmore transparent and more reliableâ with a Trump appointee.
âAnd if there are big changes and big revisions, we expect more big revisions for the jobs data in September, for example, then we want to know why, we want people to explain it to us,â he continued.
Hassett did not say whether the White House had asked McEntarfer to explain the reason for the revisions in the data before she was fired.
The White House did not immediately respond to CNBCâs request for comment.
McEntarferâs firing came after the BLS reported weaker-than-expected jobs figures.
Nonfarm payrolls rose 73,000 in July, above the prior monthâs 14,000 jobs but below even the meager Dow Jones estimate for a gain of 100,000. June and May totals were revised sharply lower, down by a combined 258,000 from previously announced levels.
Trump has often praised strong jobs reports during periods of growth.
Trust issues
McEntarferâs ouster drew sharp backlash from economists and others, fearing that such a move could undermine trust in the governmentâs data in the future.
Former BLS Commissioner William Beach, whom Trump appointed, said the commissionerâs firing was âtotally groundless,â which âsets a dangerous precedent and undermines the statistical mission of the Bureau,â according to a post on X shortly after the firing.
On Sunday, Beach said that the firing is âdamagingâ and âundermines credibilityâ of the institution.
âSuppose that they get a new commissioner, and this person, male or female, are just the best people possible, right? And they do a bad number,â he said on CNN.
âWell, everybodyâs going to think, well, itâs not as bad as it probably really is, because theyâre going to suspect political influence.â
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon echoed Beachâs criticism.
Schumer said Trump was acting like a âbad leaderâ and a dictator.
âWell, Donald Trump, firing her isnât going to relieve the chaos that you created with your ramshackle tariff regime,â Schumer said on the Senate floor.
Wyden slammed Trumpâs firing as âthe act of somebody who is soft, weak and afraid to own up to the reality of the damage his chaos is inflicting on our economy.â
âBottom line, Trump wants to cook the books,â Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, said in a statement after Trump fired McEntarfer.
Data collection in doubt
While many criticized the controversial firing of the BLS commissioner, others questioned whether the methods long used to compile the jobs data should be revisited.
Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, for instance, said that the government uses surveys to inform the jobs data that âfrankly just arenât that effective anymore.â
âThey can get this data, I think, other ways, and I think thatâs where the focus ought to be,â he said Sunday on CBS News.
âHow do we get the data and be more resilient and more predictable and more understandable?â he continued.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said Friday that âwe have to look somewhere for objective statistics.â
âWhen the people providing the statistics are fired, it makes it much harder to make judgments that, you know, the statistics wonât be politicized,â Paul told NBC News, emphasizing the need for trusted data.
WATCH: Trump fires BLS chief Dr. Erika McEntarfer after labor data revisions


