Still, the jobs numbers translated into more good news for Republicans and President Trump, with the 2020 elections on the horizon.
"A great jobs report to cap off a great year for our economy!" tweeted Rep. David Schweikert (R-AZ).
The USA is winning under @realDonaldTrump! https://t.co/2Hw19dFEAj
— Rep. Jeff Duncan (@RepJeffDuncan) January 10, 2020
The U6 unemployment rate - considered the broadest measure of joblessness - went down to just 6.7 percent in December, again signaling the broader job gains generated by the economy.
When President Trump took office, the U6 rate was 9.3 percent; this figure has been kept by the Labor Department since 1994, and the December rate of 6.7 percent was the lowest figure ever recorded.
The Labor Force Participation Rate stayed at 63.2 percent in December. That figure was often a target of derision by Republicans during the Obama Administration - but despite the job gains of the last three years - the labor force numbers have stayed in a very narrow range under President Trump.
The Labor Force Participation Rate remained at 63.2 percent in December. It has been between 62.7 and 63.2 for the three years that President Trump has been in office pic.twitter.com/yI6mpdHOPn
— Jamie Dupree (@jamiedupree) January 10, 2020
The unemployment rate for black Americans - which had hit a historic low in August at 5.4 percent - bounced back up to 5.9 percent in December.
While GOP lawmakers touted 'solid wage growth' after the jobs report was issued on Friday, figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics showed average hourly wages went up just three cents an hour in December.
Average hourly wages went up only a couple of cents in December, up 79 cents an hour over Dec 2018 pic.twitter.com/MWd26CEttl
— Jamie Dupree (@jamiedupree) January 10, 2020
One other sign of a healthy economy came from figures about people holding multiple jobs - that went down by 161,000 in December, the fifth straight monthly decline.
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