国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

  Home>News Center>World
         
 

Bush and Kerry differ on state of economy
(Agencies)
Updated: 2004-09-04 16:04

Good news, or bad? U.S. President Bush and Democrat John Kerry have differing takes about the vitality of the nation's job market — a question that's heating up this year's race for the White House.

Bush, who is campaigning Saturday in Ohio — a pivotal state that has lost tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs, says a new U.S. employment report offers positive news to voters worried about jobs.

Kerry, also in Ohio on the weekend before Labor Day, says job growth is nowhere near robust.

"The economy is strong and getting stronger," Bush said Friday in Iowa before flying to Ohio, where he was attending two rallies before moving on to Pennsylvania and back to the White House.

The president said 144,000 new jobs the Labor Department reports were created in August and nearly 60,000 more jobs in June and July than previously estimated are evidence of a rebounding economy.

Overall, he said, the U.S. economy has 1.7 million more jobs than it did in August 2003. However, even with the job gains over the past year, there are still 913,000 fewer workers on payrolls than when Bush took office.

The U.S. unemployment rate fell to 5.4 percent in August, nearly 1 percentage point below the peak last summer, and lower than the average rate of the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, Bush noted.

Campaigning in Ohio on Friday, Kerry said the latest Labor Department report showing 144,000 new jobs created in August — slightly fewer than what had been projected by economists — was evidence of Bush's "record of failure" to create jobs.

In Newark, Ohio, Kerry heard from four people who said they recently lost their jobs and were worried about finding new ones and getting health care when they need it. "The president wants you to re-elect him. For what?" Kerry asked them. "Losing jobs?"

He said the newest numbers show the nation hasn't created nearly enough jobs to get the economy moving again.

Sen. John Edwards, Kerry's running mate, also hit on the loss of jobs at the start of a two-day bus tour through Wisconsin on Friday.

"The truth is, not enough jobs are being created to even take care of the new people going into the work force, much less the hundreds of thousands of people who have lost their jobs over the last several years," Edwards said in Green Bay.

Meanwhile, Vice President Dick Cheney sought to portray Kerry as a flip-flopper during a campaign swing through the West. "It's not only wildfires that shift with the wind," Cheney said Friday in Las Vegas.

Bush planned to talk in Ohio Saturday about "opportunity zones," an idea to use tax incentives to encourage private and public investment in poor neighborhoods across the nation.

He's to attend rallies in Cleveland, Lake County along Lake Erie in northeastern Ohio and Erie, Pa., before returning to Washington, completing his two-day, post-convention campaign trip.

Bush won Ohio's 20 electoral votes in 2000, as has every other Republican ever elected president. Voters in Ohio have voted for the winning presidential candidate in every election since 1964. Bush won the state by 4 percentage points in 2000, but is vulnerable because the state has lost more than 200,000 jobs since he took office.

"The Bush campaign understands the importance of reaching out to undecided voters in central Ohio," said Jason Mauk, a spokesman for the Ohio Republican Party.

Mauk said that at the GOP convention in New York, which closed on Thursday evening, the president's top political adviser, Karl Rove, told Ohio delegates: "Whether you like it our not, Ohio is where it's at in this election."



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

Russia school standoff ends with 250 dead

 

   
 

Beijing slams Chen's splittism remark

 

   
 

China to have 140 million cars by 2020

 

   
 

China eager to promote prosperity in Asia

 

   
 

Hearing held on disputed traffic regulation

 

   
 

Nation ups efforts in fight against TB

 

   
  Russia school standoff ends with 250 dead
   
  Spacewalking astronauts install antennas
   
  Jailed assassin 'weds' using loophole
   
  100 die in Russian school siege shootout
   
  Russia hostages evacuated, commandos fighting kidnappers
   
  Reporter: Up to 100 bodies seen in Russia school gym
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
Bush: Strikes may go beyond Afghan
   
Bush, Kerry square off over jobs, Iraq
   
Bush promises safer world, says will not relent
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement
         
岳阳县| 西宁市| 鄯善县| 高要市| 日喀则市| 内乡县| 大连市| 兴义市| 武义县| 青铜峡市| 抚州市| 石河子市| 鄱阳县| 砚山县| 砀山县| 会东县| 汤原县| 津市市| 威信县| 太谷县| 云霄县| 威远县| 城固县| 大城县| 齐齐哈尔市| 周至县| 页游| 永泰县| 大冶市| 会泽县| 永年县| 永和县| 双鸭山市| 南川市| 勐海县| 合水县| 库尔勒市| 灵寿县| 棋牌| 杭锦后旗| 洪雅县|