White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders has backtracked on her claim that the Obama administration created just 195,000 jobs for African Americans, after it emerged that the actual figure is closer to three million.
President Donald Trump’s spokeswoman argued on Tuesday that this administration had added 700,000 new jobs for African Americans in his first 18 months in office, compared to only 195,000 for eight years under President Barack Obama. This meant, Sanders said originally, that Trump had “already tripled what President Obama did in eight years.”
Except that wasn’t true: the Obama administration oversaw the creation of 2.9 million African-American jobs over the eight years. A NPR fact check found the figure Sanders was quoting came from adding the two 20-month stretches following Obama’s election in 2008 and re-election in 2012, but ignoring the period in between.
The misinformation originated with the White House’s Council of Economic Advisers (CEA), which posted data showing changes in minority employment 20 months after the last three election cycles.
Sanders then did what appears to be a first for a member of an administration fond of branding information ‘fake news’ – she admitted her mistake and issued an apology.
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The press secretary had given the misleading statistic in response to questions from reporters on Tuesday about claims from former White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman that Trump had used racial epithets on the set of his reality show ‘The Apprentice’.
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Sanders said that she has never heard Trump use the “N-word,” and cited the administration’s economic policies as proof that Trump was not a racist.
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