Hegseth and Rubio to brief members of Congress on boat strikes as questions mount – live | Trump administration

Hegseth, Rubio to brief members of Congress on boat strikes as questions mount

Good morning and welcome to US politics live blog.

We start this morning with the news that the President Donald Trumpsenior officials of the Cabinet of Ministers for national security issues, Pete Hegseth And Marco Rubiowill arrive on Capitol Hill to brief members of Congress on the investigation into strikes on US warships in the Caribbean.

The briefing by the Defense Secretary and Secretary of State comes as questions grow over escalating military force and deadly boat strikes in international waters near Venezuela. The Associated Press notes that lawmakers are examining the Sept. 2 attack as they try to make the case for a broader U.S. military buildup in the region that increasingly appears to be aimed at Venezuela.

Monday evening The US military said it attacked three more ships suspected of carrying drugs in the eastern Pacific, killing eight people..

“We have thousands of troops and our largest aircraft carrier in the Caribbean – but zero, zero explanation for what Trump is trying to achieve,” the Senate Democratic leader said. Chuck Schumer.

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Lagging data shows the US lost 105,000 jobs in October and added 64,000 in November.

Michael Sainato

The U.S. labor market grew more than expected last month, offsetting some of the damage caused by the federal government shutdown, official data showed.

Today's long-awaited report estimates that 105,000 jobs were lost, compared with 64,000 in November. Job growth in November was stronger than many economists had expected, with the consensus forecast for about 40,000 new jobs.

But The overall unemployment rate continued to rise – reaching 4.6% last month, a four-year high. – amid concerns about power US Economy.

Previous estimates for overall job growth in August and September were also downgraded, from a fall of 4,000 to 26,000 and a rise of 119,000 to 108,000, respectively.

The latest jobs data, usually released monthly, was delayed due to the government shutdown. Federal government jobs fell by 162,000 in October and by 6,000 in November.

The figures come amid turbulent U.S. economic data, once considered the gold standard in government data.

Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced that full October jobs data would not be released, and November jobs data was delayed by the 43-day federal government shutdown and questions had been raised about its accuracy.

Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell warned last week that the BLS data should be taken “sceptically” while the hangover left over from the shutdown works its way through the system.

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