By

Lucy Madison /

CBS News/ November 2, 2012, 11:26 AM

New jobs report, same spin

CBS News

The final jobs report before Tuesday's presidential election contained some decent news about the U.S. economy, with news of 171,000 new jobs and positively revised numbers from August and September. Even so, the political spin from both sides of the aisle sounded much as it does every month: Within minutes of the report's release, Mitt Romney and Republican leadership released a flurry of statements pounding the president for failed policies and "persistently high unemployment," while the Obama administration repeated a familiar message about the economy's steady but incomplete recovery.

The report, which produced better-than-expected job growth but also included an uptick of 0.1 percentage point to the unemployment rate, is not expected to drastically impact the outcome of the presidential election next week. Nevertheless, Republicans immediately set about trying to make the numbers work in their favor.

"Today's increase in the unemployment rate is a sad reminder that the economy is at a virtual standstill. The jobless rate is higher than it was when President Obama took office, and there are still 23 million Americans struggling for work," said Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney in a statement. "On Tuesday, America will make a choice between stagnation and prosperity. For four years, President Obama's policies have crushed America's middle class...When I'm president, I'm going to make real changes that lead to a real recovery, so that the next four years are better than the last."

House Speaker John Boehner echoed a familiar message - via a statement that in parts sounds eerily familiar to what he said last month around this time.

"Four years of persistently high unemployment and long-term joblessness might be the best President Obama can do - but it's nowhere near what the American people can do if we get Washington out of their way," he said. "The American people deserve better. The House has already approved bipartisan legislation to stop all of the tax hikes, replaced the defense 'sequester,' and passed straightforward bills cutting red tape and saving programs like Medicare from bankruptcy." (After the September jobs report, Boehner made similar points: He said that "job creation is far too slow and the unemployment rate is far too high" and underscored that the "House passed a bipartisan bill to stop all of the president's tax hikes.")

Reince Priebus, meanwhile, argued that "America desperately needs jobs and cannot afford four more years like the last four. After four years of the Obama presidency, unemployment remains painfully high, and incomes are not growing. America needs and deserves a real recovery, but Obama has proven incapable of delivering." (Here's Priebus last month: "Americans cannot afford four more years like the last four years... High unemployment remains a chronic condition in America, the seriousness of which is measured not simply by one number but by the millions of families trying to make ends meet in an impossible economy.")

The White House was even more egregious in rehashing its rhetoric: The first paragraph of a memo by Alan Krueger, chairman of the White House council of economic advisers, was exactly the same as the intro from the memo from last month. There was also an indicative typo at the beginning of the October note, which said "Alan B. Krueger, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, issued the following statement today on the employment situation in September."

"While more work remains to be done, today's employment report provides further evidence that the U.S. economy is continuing to heal from the wounds inflicted by the worst downturn since the Great Depression," he wrote. "It is critical that we continue the policies that are building an economy that works for the middle class as we dig our way out of the deep hole that was caused by the severe recession that began in December 2007."

Further down in the White House memo, Krueger highlights the October report's positive data -- but the rhetoric surrounding it could hardly have been more similar. The memo's second paragraph, which addressed the White House's attempts to pass middle class tax cuts and other measure, included a couple minor tweaks from the language last month.

Ultimately, the similarity in how both sides respond to the job reports month after month reflects the seemingly outsized impact the numbers have taken on in this electoral cycle. Both sides are eager to capitalize on any possible advantage in what is expected to be an exceptionally tight election grounded in arguments about which candidate would do a better job of fixing the economy. But as CBS News' Jill Schlesinger writes, Americans don't necessarily cast their votes based on what BLS reports -or the politicians spinning them - come up with.

"If voters view the Great Recession as an extreme event, which no president since FDR had to confront, and they focus on the slow improvement to the labor market, then Obama will win," Schlesinger writes. "If voters believe that Obama's policies were not the right ones to turn around the jobs market faster, despite the unique circumstances, they will elect Romney."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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    Lucy Madison is a political reporter for CBSNews.com.

455 Comments Add a Comment
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
One More Day.......till FOUR MORE YEARS!!! : )

OBAMA 2012
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
Well Y'all have a good weekend, what's left of it!
I'm giving up for the day!
: )
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Think3Times replies:
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Did you know that Barry Manilow wrote all of the songs except for "I write the songs" ?
Dancing-in-the-Streets replies:
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Yes I did know that, he didn't even LIKE that song! LOL!
You ever read his autobiography? Pretty good book!
Did you know when Barry Manilow and Bette Midler did a concert up in New York on New Years Eve...they taped a joint to the bottom of each seat for the midnight celebration? LOL!
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
SNAP!
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Dancing-in-the-Streets replies:
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lol! : )
Dancing-in-the-Streets replies:
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lol...you may be very perceptive!

Elvis is a little before my time, but I do love some of the 50's music.

Classic Country is my first love in music I guess, but I like everything else too, from Barry Manilow to Led Zeppelin to the Jazz I've just recently learned to appreciate!

I just love to dance, doesn't really matter what's playing! : )
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Think3Times says:
HAH if it was a snake it would have bit me!

Of course Dan isn't going to admit in a post that he was those other names, because they could be used as evidence to get his current name banned for circumventing his other bans.
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Think3Times replies:
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SOOOOO

I'm going to ask you a bunch of personal questions that I have no business in asking.

Nice try Dan, I'm not sure where Edina is, I know where the MOA is, but I live nowhere near that area of MN.

I suppose I could look them up, but I really don't care.
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Think3Times says:
legalbutnotjust replies:

It's all upstairs though, the parts that catch my eye or make me think or look twice. And religious stuff is not a part of any of that.
__________________________

Are you not at all concerned with these types of religious views and how they effect our world?
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Think3Times says:
Hey Dan, why don't you explain to LBNJ why we call you Dan, tell him what you said a few weeks ago to RRFL under the name DAN9080, and then again as DAN9083, and explain why you changed to this name to mock RRFL.. He's been asking.. so give him some answers.
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Think3Times replies:
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So you are claiming that YOU aren't DAN ?
Dancing-in-the-Streets replies:
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He IS Dan!

For goodness sakes he Answers to Dan! LOL!
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
LOL!

"I will speak for Dan..."

Careful with that split personality thing Dan, you play that roll too long it could start to take over!
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
rrfl_is_a_lib replies:
Our politics aside, Zann is a great American!!!!!

BTW, Zann if Romney wins Penn. It is all over. Look at the polls.....Read em and cry.
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Oh you poor poor creature Dan! Its going to be so difficult for you on Tuesday night!

Intrade has the chances on Pennsylvannia as 79.5% Obama and 20.6% Romney!

LMAO! And ready to start Dancing in the Streets again! : )
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Dancing-in-the-Streets replies:
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This part Dan??

"I don't believe Romney is concerned with the working class. I just don't like how we're looked at these days," said Gregory Lutz, 64, a Democrat from Mildred in Sullivan County. Attacks that highlighted Romney's foreign bank accounts sowed more doubt, he said.

Because he's taken advantage of offshore tax benefits, "I don't trust what he says about keeping jobs in the U.S."
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
How long has CBS had commenters? Just curious?

And are there any that have been here from the beginning?
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Think3Times replies:
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From chatting around with RRFL and RTC and O4A, I do know that in the past(before my time) That RRFL used to be "Slownewsday" and "Slappy" and O4A was "Meboard" and RTC was "Magnus" but I never call them by those names because I wasn't here then.
Think3Times replies:
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P.S. I only started to call Dancing "Zann" this weekend, because she came in as ZANNZELSVICTORYDANCE

I hope I spelled that right lol
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Dancing-in-the-Streets says:
Think3Times replies:
I would never lump you into the same "category" as Zann..

If Zann wishes to keep acknowledging your existence, thats her choice.
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LOL! I'm a realistic person. And "Dan" and those like him are very real, we wouldn't be wise to pretend they don't exist!
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Think3Times replies:
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This is the internet.. so this could all be a bunch of trolling to get rises out of people.

Real Life is an entirely different story.

I prefer to just ignore people that spit out the types of garbage Dan does. Now if he were living next door to me and I KNEW these were facts about him.. yes I would have a different POV.
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