Donald Trump has sparked controversy after abruptly dismissing the head of the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), falsely accusing her of playing a political role in the 2024 presidential election. The former president, now the Republican nominee for the 2025 race, claimed without evidence that the BLS director had interfered with jobs data to favour the Biden administration last year. Economists, legal experts, and former officials have widely condemned the move as an attack on institutional independence.
Dismissal draws bipartisan criticism
The fired BLS commissioner, Sandra Koenig, was appointed during Trump’s first term and had served under both Democratic and Republican administrations. Her removal—days after the release of stronger-than-expected labour figures—raised immediate questions about political retaliation. Trump alleged that Koenig had “rigged the jobs numbers” in 2024 to benefit Biden’s re-election campaign, a claim that has been refuted by multiple government watchdogs and economists.
Undermining data integrity, say experts
Labour economists and statisticians defended the BLS as a non-partisan body governed by strict methodological transparency. “To allege manipulation without any proof is deeply irresponsible and erodes trust in federal data,” said one former BLS director. Analysts fear that politicising statistical agencies could distort future policy decisions and market expectations, particularly as the US grapples with inflation management and employment shifts in a post-pandemic economy.
A pattern of attacking civil institutions
Critics have compared the dismissal to earlier Trump-era actions that challenged the credibility of public agencies—from the Department of Justice to the National Weather Service. “This is part of a broader pattern of undermining independent institutions,” noted a senior fellow at a Washington think tank. The White House under President Harris has yet to formally respond but is reportedly consulting legal counsel about the move’s implications for civil service protections.
Legal and political consequences looming
Legal scholars suggest that Trump may have overstepped his authority by bypassing civil service protocols in removing a career official without cause. If re-elected, Trump has pledged to expand executive control over federal agencies, reigniting debate about the balance between elected power and bureaucratic independence. Congressional Democrats are calling for an inquiry, while moderate Republicans have remained largely silent.
REFH – Newshub, 2 August 2025

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