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Election 2016 president candidates from left to right: Libertarian Party candidate Gov. Gary Johnson, Green Party candidate Dr. Jill Stein, Republican Party candidate Donald J. Trump, and Democratic Party candidate Hillary R. Clinton.

Election 2016 president candidates from left to right: Libertarian Party candidate Gov. Gary Johnson, Green Party candidate Dr. Jill Stein, Republican Party candidate Donald J. Trump, and Democratic Party candidate Hillary R. Clinton.

A new poll finds Democrat Hillary Clinton holding only a small lead over Republican Donald Trump and Libertarian Gary Johnson in New Mexico, once a safely Blue state. According to the poll conducted by Research & Polling Inc. for the Albuquerque Journal, Mrs. Clinton received 35% and Mr. Trump took 31%, with 24% of New Mexicans backing Gov. Johnson, the home state governor. Two (2%) percent chose Green Party candidate Dr. Jill Stein.

“The election is close in New Mexico,” said Brian Sanderoff, president of Research & Polling Inc. “The bottom line is that New Mexico is more competitive than I expected.”

The poll was conducted from September 27-29, with interviews beginning the day after the first presidential debate. Gov. Johnson is peeling off some Republicans still uncomfortable with their party’s nominee, but really hurting Mrs. Clinton among younger voters and Hispanics.

New Mexico Poll

Source: Albuquerque Journal & Research & Polling Inc.

“Johnson is picking up Hispanic support, and that is what is keeping Hillary Clinton down,” Mr. Sanderoff said. “The Democratic candidate needs to be getting much more than 40 percent of the Hispanic vote to win New Mexico comfortably.”

In a head-to-head matchup between Mr. Trump and Mrs. Clinton, the former secretary of state leads by 10 points, 44% to 34%. However, 11% said they wouldn’t vote for either candidate in a head-to-head matchup, while 3% chose “other” and 8% were undecided or didn’t know whom they would vote for. But the race is a 4-way race in the Land of Enchantment, and with the former two-term New Mexico governor taking 31% of Hispanics and Mr. Trump dominating by more than a 2 to 1 margin (52% to 20%) in the rural region, the state is now in play.

(Correction: The article has been updated to reflect G. W. Bush only carrying the state in 2004. Though it was close in 2000 against Vice President Al Gore, he carried it by 300 votes.)

Hispanics were singlehandedly used by Democrats to change a once-reliably Red state to reliably Blue. President George W. Bush easily carried the state in 2004 but Arizona Sen. John McCain lost it to President Barack Obama in 2008. Gov. Mitt Romney, the 2012 Republican nominee, didn’t even attempt to make a play for the state and Mr. Obama won it handily.

“It is not surprising that Donald Trump would perform really well in this rural and conservative part of the state,” Mr. Sanderoff added. “Eastern New Mexico has long been a bastion of support for Republican candidates.”

The poll surveyed 501 likely New Mexico voters and contained a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percent. All of the poll respondents were questioned by live interviewers, with 52 percent of respondents reached by cellphone and 48 percent on land lines.

A new poll finds Hillary Clinton holding

Secretary of State John Kerry speaks with former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton during the groundbreaking ceremony for the U.S. Diplomacy Center, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2014, at the State Department in Washington. Kerry hosted five of his predecessors in a rare public reunion for the groundbreaking of a museum commemorating the achievements of American statesmanship. (Photo: AP/Carolyn Kaster)

Secretary of State John Kerry speaks with former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton during the groundbreaking ceremony for the U.S. Diplomacy Center, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2014, at the State Department in Washington. Kerry hosted five of his predecessors in a rare public reunion for the groundbreaking of a museum commemorating the achievements of American statesmanship. (Photo: AP/Carolyn Kaster)

When the end came for Russian President Boris Yeltsen, as the Russian economy was crumbling and there was no support left for his leadership in the Duma, one of his main concerns was protecting himself and his family from prosecution for corruption. That is why he appointed Vladimir Putin, an extremely loyal subordinate whom he could trust with his secrets, someone who would not immediately contact prosecutors and hound his family even after he died. Someone who would not go after the money secreted away in the Caymans.  Someone who would let sleeping dogs lie.

This is exactly the situation we have with the current political environment in the United States as the 2016 election season nears its conclusion.

The party in power has shown itself to be nothing more than a massive organized-crime syndicate that has used the levers of power to persecute the political opposition and line its pocketbooks and bank accounts with the taxpayers’ money. From John Kerry sending millions to his daughter’s non-profit, to Hillary Clinton shaking down the State Department’s clients for money, to public employee unions spiking their pensions, the corruption is complete across all levels of the Democratic Party and their hold on the executive branch.

But I think this rabbit hole goes much deeper. We are now into corruption that damages the national security of the United States in an existential way.

Every day there is a new “secret” deal revealed where the Obama administration betrayed America with its desire to give the world’s real Islamic State, the Islamic Republic of Iran, the nuclear bomb, along with hundreds of billions in dollars, secretly flown to Tehran in the dead of night.

Hillary Clinton sold 20 percent of America’s uranium to the Russians for money.

The appeasement and downright enabling of the Islamic jihadist agenda by this administration will be written about in the history books. I suspect, when the cover is taken off the rabbit hole, we will be astounded with what has actually been given away, leaked, stolen and ripped off by Obama and his minions.

This is why they are so scared of Trump. This is why they are fighting tooth and nail. This is why they don’t want to give up power and let the American people find out what has really gone on.  This is why the federal Department of Homeland Security is pushing the states to let it “advise and assist” in the electoral process.

I hope President Trump will prosecute the illegality he finds when he takes office. To not do so would be a travesty of justice and set the precedent for the end of the Republic.

Of course, Obama may pardon all the main offenders but the crime syndicate is huge. He can’t pardon everyone. We at least have to find out what happened even if the key players don’t go to jail.

Hillary cannot be allowed into the White House. This time she will take much more than the furniture.

This article first appeared on (Copyright © 2016) The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

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A President Donald Trump will prosecute any

The 2016 USC Dornsife / LA Times Presidential Election Poll for October 2, 2016: Republican Donald Trump vs. Democrat Hillary Clinton. (Photo: THE USC DORNSIFE / LA TIMES PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION "DAYBREAK" POLL)

The 2016 USC Dornsife / LA Times Presidential Election Poll for October 2, 2016: Republican Donald Trump vs. Democrat Hillary Clinton. (Photo: THE USC DORNSIFE / LA TIMES PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION “DAYBREAK” POLL)

After nearly a week of interviews conducted after the first presidential debate, Donald Trump leads Hillary Clinton by roughly 5 points in the LA Times Poll, 46.9% to 42.2%. TV pundits have stuck to conventional political wisdom, despite the fact it has failed them at every turn this election cycle.

As a result, the LA Times Poll has been taking even more heat than it has in the previous several weeks, which is really saying something.

Last week, during an appearance on Fox News, Larry Sabato, whom we respect (so save your emails), insinuated “random sample polls” have shown an impact from the debate that favors Mrs. Clinton. It was an indirect dig at the LA Times Poll–and, the People’s Pundit Daily U.S. Presidential Election Daily Tracking Poll for that matter–a dig that has been repeated on Twitter by others like Sean Trende at Real Clear Politics.

But there’s something pretty damn significant missing from the conventional wisdom-based argument, something I think readers and election-watchers should know. In 2012, the model and methodology they are using, which was designed by the team behind the RAND Continuous Presidential Election Poll, or the “Daybreak Poll,” which was accurate when most other traditional random sample polls were not.

But that’s not it. It’s the reason why the model was right that is of particular significance to this election cycle. Let’s take a look at how they polled the 2012 presidential election between President Barack Obama and Gov. Mitt Romney, and their results.

As you can see from the graph above, the “Daybreak Poll” only temporarily had the former Republican nominee in the lead at the beginning of the month of September. Why is this significant? Because following the first presidential debate moderated by Jim Lehrer, a debate the pundits and conventional political wisdom all agreed Gov. Romney won handily, random sample polls found President Obama trailing by roughly 2 to 7 points.

For instance, a Pew Research Center survey, which was conducted from October 4 to October 7, found Mr. Obama trailing Mr. Romney by 4 points, 45% to 49%. In the Daybreak Poll, Mr. Romney never led during that period and, in fact, was down by roughly 4 points during that very week, nearly the same margin he would go on to lose the election by. The week before the election, 2 random sample polls found Mr. Obama behind by 1 point, another 2 had him up by 1 point and just 1 had him up by 3.

Another 3 polls conducted the final week had the race tied, with Gov. Romney leading among the most likely of voters.

NeverTrump Republican pollster Ed Goeas, who conducted the final GW Battleground Poll for Politico in 2012, argued that he believed many who said they were likely to vote would not.

Among the 80 percent of those surveyed who he believes are most likely to actually vote, Romney leads by 3 points, 51 percent to 48 percent. Among the 70 percent he believes are most likely, Romney leads by 2 points, 51 percent to 49 percent.

“So in no case at any level does Obama break that 50 percent mark,” Goeas said the Tuesday of the presidential election. “I think you’re probably looking at a 2-point Romney win at this point … Then the question becomes: What about the Electoral College?”

Well, we now know Mr. Goeas, as well as many other “Gold Standard” pollsters, were flatly wrong. Mr. Obama’s voters did come out to vote, while millions upon millions of GOP-leaning voters, many of the very same voters prone to Mr. Trump’s nationalist message, stayed home and did not.

In 2014, many of these same pollsters overcorrected, and shocker, they were wrong again. We were not. Why? Because we recognized that pollsters in 2012, and again in 2014, seemed to be having a difficult time reading the electorate, specifically participants who were most likely to vote. To put it simply, many pollsters’ likely voter models are broken and we find it rich–to put it nicely–that these are the same voices criticizing the LA Times Poll.

In 2012, they defended the disparity of their results by stating their model “allows us to ask the same people for their opinion repeatedly over time,” which “leads to much more stable outcomes; changes that we see are true changes in people’s opinions and not the result of random fluctuations in who gets asked the questions.”

Basically, if you can identify and track a representative sample of truly undecided voters–those who will ultimately decide the outcome of the election–than you can more accurately predict that outcome. They were trying to effectively minimize their exposure to what causes sampling errors in random samples while at the same time more correctly identify those who were most likely to vote.

They argued they “may be more accurately capturing the likely votes of a greater number of voters in the crucial ‘middle’ by allowing respondents to more precisely assign their own numerical probability (or percent chance) to both the likelihood that they will vote and the likelihood that they will vote for a particular candidate.”

We’re not saying that random sample polls are a thing of the past, but we are, I am, saying that it may be time for them to evolve. More importantly, I am saying that it is intellectually dishonest to dismiss the findings of someone who was right, particularly when you were wrong. Perhaps, just perhaps, it isn’t the case the LA Times Poll has a “built-in” Trump bias, as Trende and others have suggested. Perhaps, just perhaps, the others have a built-in Clinton bias.

Perhaps the LA Times Poll is accurately capturing the indisputable fact that Trump voters are far more likely to vote than Clinton voters, something the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll did in fact dispute.

“By comparison,” they wrote in 2012, “traditional polls may not be fully capturing the intentions of these voters because they rely on less precise qualitative metrics (such as somewhat likely and somewhat unlikely) when asking respondents to indicate for whom they may vote and the likelihood that they will vote.”

They were mocked in 2012, as well.

Without giving away in-house trade secrets that made us the most accurate election forecast model in 2014, the People’s Pundit Daily U.S. Presidential Election Daily Tracking Poll is somewhat of a hybrid. We recognized the potential of the model in 2014, incorporated what we thought we should and it paid off. Meanwhile, traditional pollsters were almost universally wrong.

So, in closing, when I see the LA Times Poll markedly more pro-Trump than our own at PPD, I recognize that it would be an act of hubris to outright dismiss it.

(UPDATE: A Twitter user sent this study from Columbia to me after reading the article. It backs up the Rand model and explains in greater detail the point I was trying to make. Essentially, the wild swings shown by pollster never really happened in 2012, but rather were “artifacts” of the polls themselves and their sample errors. I largely agree.)

The same pundits and pollsters who were

In a leaked audio from a private fundraiser event last February in McLean, Va., Democrat Hillary Clinton says she’s “bewildered” by younger voters wanting free stuff. The audio comes to light as Mrs. Clinton gets back on the campaign trail with her former rival Bernie Sanders to tout debt-free college education. However, privately, Mrs. Clinton tells donors how she really feels about making such promises, as well as other progressive ideals championed by Sen. Sanders.

In the clip released by the Free Beacon, she said many of her former primary opponent’s supporters want “free college, free health care,” saying that she preferred to occupy the space “from the center-left to the center-right” on the political spectrum.

“There is a strain of, on the one hand, the kind of populist, nationalist, xenophobic, discriminatory kind of approach that we hear too much of from the Republican candidates,” Mrs. Clinton said during the event hosted by former U.S. ambassador Beatrice Welters. “And on the other side, there’s just a deep desire to believe that we can have free college, free healthcare, that what we’ve done hasn’t gone far enough, and that we just need to, you know, go as far as, you know, Scandinavia, whatever that means, and half the people don’t know what that means, but it’s something that they deeply feel.”

Younger, millennial voters that boycotted her and chose her rival in the Democratic primary are now largely behind third-party candidates.

Meanwhile, Mrs. Clinton also told supporters that she would likely roll back the Long Range Stand-Off (LRSO) missile program, a major upgrade to the United States’ nuclear weapons program. “Will you cancel this program if President Obama doesn’t in the next 11 months and lead the world in a ban on this particularly destabilizing, dangerous type of nuclear weapon?” Andy Weber, a former assistant secretary of defense who oversaw the Pentagon’s nuclear weapons programs, asked at around 39:00 in the recording.

The former secretary of state responded that she was “inclined” to do so and “the last thing we need are sophisticated cruise missiles that are nuclear armed.”

About 4:30 in, she begins to have another coughing fit before asking former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell to fill in for her until she stopped coughing.

The audio marks the second time in a month private comments made by the Democratic candidate indicating she looks down on or doesn’t understand the problems and grievances of American voters. Last month, Mrs. Clinton said she put half of Donald Trump’s supporters in what she calls “a basket of deplorables” filled with irredeemable people.

In a leaked audio from a fundraiser

Hillary Clinton delivered a speech in Reno, Nevada on Thursday August 25, 2016 attempting to link Donald Trump and his supporters to the "alt right" racism. (Photo: Associated Press/AP)

Hillary Clinton delivered a speech in Reno, Nevada on Thursday August 25, 2016 attempting to link Donald Trump and his supporters to the “alt right” racism. (Photo: Associated Press/AP)

I must be perversely masochistic because I have the strange habit of reading reports issued by international bureaucracies such as the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, United Nations, and Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

But one tiny silver lining to this dark cloud is that it’s given me an opportunity to notice how these groups have settled on a common strategy of urging higher taxes for the ostensible purpose of promoting growth and development.

Seriously, this is their argument, though they always rely on euphemisms when asserting that politicians should get more money to spend.

  • The OECD, for instance, has written that “Increased domestic resource mobilisation is widely accepted as crucial for countries to successfully meet the challenges of development and achieve higher living standards for their people.”
  • The Paris-based bureaucrats of the OECD also asserted that “now is the time to consider reforms that generate long-term, stable resources for governments to finance development.”
  • The IMF is banging on this drum as well, with news reports quoting the organization’s top bureaucrat stating that “…economies need to strengthen their fiscal frameworks…by boosting…sources of revenues.” while also reporting that “The IMF chief said taxation allows governments to mobilize their revenues.”
  • And the UN, which has “…called for a tax on billionaires to help raise more than $400 billion a year” routinely categorizes such money grabs as “financing for development.”

As you can see, these bureaucracies are singing from the same hymnal, but it’s a new version. In the past, the left agitated for higher taxes simply in hopes for having more redistribution.

And they’ve urged higher taxes because of spite and hostility against those with high incomes. Some folks on the left also have supported higher taxes on the theory that the economy’s performance is boosted when deficits are smaller.

But now, they are advocating higher taxes (oops, excuse me, I mean they are urging “resource mobilization” to generate “stable resources” so there can be “financing for development” in order to “strengthen fiscal frameworks”) on the theory that bigger government is the way to get more growth.

You probably won’t be surprised to learn, however, that these reports from international bureaucracies never provide any evidence for this novel hypothesis. None. Zero. Zilch. Nada. The null set.

They simply assert that governments will be able to make presumably wonderful growth-generating “investments” if politicians can squeeze more money from the private sector.

And I strongly suspect that this absence of evidence is deliberate. Simply stated, international bureaucracies are willing to produce shoddy research (just look at what the IMF and OECD wrote about the relationship between growth and inequality), but there’s a limit to how far data can be tortured and manipulated.

Especially when there’s so much evidence from real scholars that economic performance is weakened when government gets bigger.

Not to mention that most sentient beings can look around the world and look at the moribund economies of nations with large governments (such as France,Italy, and Greece) and compare them with the better performance of places with smaller government (such as Hong Kong, Switzerland, and Singapore).

But if you read the aforementioned reports from the international bureaucracies, you’ll notice that some of them focus on getting more growth in poor nations.

Perhaps, some statists might argue, government is big enough in Europe, but not big enough in poorer regions such as sub-Saharan Africa.

So let’s look at the numbers. Is it true that governments in the developing world don’t have enough money to provide core public goods?

The answer is no.

But before sharing those numbers, let’s look at some historical data. A few years ago, I shared some research demonstrating that countries in North America and Western Europe became rich in the 1800s and early 1900s when the burden of government spending was very modest.

One would logically conclude from this data that today’s poor nations should copy that approach.

Yet here’s the data from the International Monetary Fund on government expenditures in various poor regions of the world. As you can see, the burden of government spending in these areas is two or three times larger than it was in America and other nations that when they made the move from agricultural poverty to middle class prosperity.

The bottom line is that small government and free markets is the recipe for growth and prosperity in all nations.

Just don’t expect international bureaucracies to share that recipe since one of the obvious conclusions is that we therefore don’t need parasitical bodies like the IMF, OECD, World Bank, and UN.

P.S. Unsurprisingly, Hillary Clinton also has adopted the mantra of higher-taxes → bigger government → more growth.

Unsurprisingly, Hillary Clinton also has adopted the

Hillary Clinton delivered a speech in Reno, Nevada on Thursday August 25, 2016 attempting to link Donald Trump and his supporters to the "alt right" racism. (Photo: Associated Press/AP)

Hillary Clinton delivered a speech in Reno, Nevada on Thursday August 25, 2016 attempting to link Donald Trump and his supporters to the “alt right” racism. (Photo: Associated Press/AP)

Democrat Hillary Clinton has widened her lead in a Suffolk University Poll in Nevada to 6 points, 44% to 38%, following the first presidential debate. Trump still leads on the average of polls, but that lead is now down from 2 points to under 0.8%, making the state move from LEANS TRUMP to BATTLEGROUND on the 2016 PPD Presidential Election Projection Model.

“There are many positive data points for Hillary Clinton in this poll,” said David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center in Boston. “The only reasonably good news for Donald Trump is that Clinton’s 44 percent number never moved in the head-to-head matchup. Trump’s number dropped from 42 percent in August to 38 percent today, but he lost many of his voters to Gary Johnson, not Clinton.”

While the former secretary of state’s margin is up from 2 points in their August survey, the lead comes entirely from the New York businessman falling among women.

Nevada voters said that the number one issue facing the next president is jobs/economy (23%), followed by terrorism and national security (20%), choosing Supreme Court nominees (11%), and education (7%), which has moved up several notches to fourth place since August. When voters were asked if they feel more or less safe living in America than they did five to 10 years ago, 48% said less safe, 12 percent more safe, and 38% said no change.

Democrat Hillary Clinton has widened her lead

Hillary-Clinton-Benghazi-hearing

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton listens to a question as she testifies before the House Select Committee on Benghazi, in Washington, D.C., Oct. 22, 2015. Reuters

I am lucky enough to have the honor of one of my sons deciding to become an officer in the United States military. I don’t want him serving under a Hillary Clinton presidency. I remember very clearly, during Bill Clinton’s administration, senior military officers being turned away from the White House because they were in uniform.

“We don’t want your kind here,” a flag officer was allegedly told by a junior Clinton staffer.

Bill Clinton was the only president in U.S. history with whom the chiefs of staff had to remind the rank and file that it was against the Uniform Code of Military Justice to make bad comments about the commander-in-chief.

The disgrace of the Oval Office, the lying, the lack of character, the cheap publicity stunts substituted as real policy, all drove down respect for President Clinton among the armed forces. However, as usual with Democratic presidencies, it was the lack of trust in commanders on the ground and the micromanagement of battlefield actions that inspired suspicion of the White House.

The Obama administration has been famous for this micromanagement, as alluded to by several former secretaries of defense (here, here, here and here).

Somalia was the perfect example. When sending our finest commandos during daylight to capture a two-bit warlord, Clinton refused overhead AC-130 gunship support due to ‘optics.’ We know the rest of the story as these brave soldiers fought to the death against a Somali mob numbering tens of thousands with no air cover.

Democratic politicians, for the most part, don’t serve in the military. They don’t understand duty, honor, country. They will sell-out the soldier on the ground for political gain. I have no doubt that Hillary Clinton would do the same.

I don’t want my son sacrificed for Hillary’s bank account or lust for power. I don’t have faith she would do the right thing. She already demonstrated this lack of fidelity in Benghazi. In her words, just four dead Americans, what difference does it make?

Copyright © 2016 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

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I am lucky enough to have the

VA-Gov-Terry-McAuliffe

Terry McAuliffe gestures as he talks with members of the House and Senate adjournment committee at the Capitol in Richmond. (Steve Helber/AP)

Rockingham County officials confirmed the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is looking into voter fraud after a Democratic group registered dead people in Harrisonburg, Virginia. Andrew Spieles, a James Madison University student and Democrat working for HarrisonburgVotes, confessed earlier this month that he submitted some 19 applications for deceased individuals.

The story was originally reported by The Breeze, a student newspaper. “He turned in 19 voters to the registrar [of] folks that were deceased,” a a source with HarrisonburgVOTES to The Breeze.

HarrisonburgVotes is run by Joe Fitzgerald, a prominent local Democrat and the chairman of his congressional district’s Democratic Committee.

“On August 15 I found out and on the 16 [the suspect] confessed to me,” said Mr. Fitzgerald, who is also the technology coordinator for the dean’s office of the College of Arts and Letters. “I contacted the police immediately to let them know what I knew.”

Republican lawmakers held a news conference call Thursday in an attempt to shed light on the fraud, which they said warrants their push for strong voter ID laws. People’s Pundit Daily has now reported on several instances of fraud, including in the battleground state of Colorado, which are appearing to be the tip of a potentially large iceberg.

“Often times we hear our Democrat colleagues suggest that voter fraud doesn’t exist in Virginia or is a myth,” said House Speaker William H. Howell, R-Stafford. “Well it does indisputably exist.”

The group’s Facebook page, which served as an indicator for their ideology and identified their party affiliation, was deleted Friday and their Twitter account feed was put on “protected” status, meaning it is now hidden from public view. The group’s blog is now marked private to hide the content.

Why are on Earth would a public voter registration effort be impossible to reach? Doesn’t that, well, defeat the point?

“If it hadn’t been for the vigilance of a citizen, this fraud effort may never have been uncovered until it was too late,” said Del. Mark L. Cole, R-Spotsylvania, who chairs the House Privileges and Elections Committee.

Technically, the fraudulent voters will remain registered as the investigation is carried out, but if her office receives an absentee ballot from one of the dead voters, it would react appropriately. Logan said she expects the State Board of Elections and her local electoral board will allow her to cancel the registrations before the Nov. 8 election.

Rockingham County officials confirmed the FBI is

Midwest-Auto-manufacturing-factory

Auto manufacturing plant and worker in Midwest. (Photo: Reuters)

The MNI Chicago Business Barometer, the Institute for Supply Management’s gauge of factory activity in the Midwest, increased 2.7 points to 54.2 in September from 51.5, recovering most of lost ground experienced in the previous month. The MNI Chicago Report is up from earlier in the year when the Barometer averaged 53.8 in Q3, up from 52.2 in Q2 and the highest quarterly level since Q4 2014.

“Economic growth in the US appears to have picked up a little at the end of the third quarter and although the Employment component fell, this was on the back of a relatively strong showing in the previous month,” said Lorena Castellanos, senior economist at MNI Indicators. “Note Employment usually lags changes in orders and output, so it was not that surprising to see this component weakening in September.”

The increase in the Chicago Business Barometer was almost exclusively driven by large gains in Production, which rose 7.3 points to 59.8, the highest since January 2016. New Orders and Order Backlogs, which caused the Barometer to fall in August, were flat in September. Order Backlogs did climb above the 50 breakeven level. Employment was the only Barometer component that fell, after gaining to a 16-month high in August.

The MNI Chicago Business Barometer, the Institute

consumer-spending

A shopper organizes his cash before paying for merchandise at a Best Buy Co. store in Peoria, Illinois, U.S., on Friday, Nov. 23, 2012. (Photo: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty)

The Commerce Department reported Friday consumer spending was flat in the month of August, coming in lower than the expectation for an 0.1% increase. Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, now posted the weakest reading since March.

Spending, like other economic indicators, has tapered off amid weakened gross domestic product (GDP) data over the prior two quarters. Personal income increased 0.2%, matching the estimate. Personal incomes rose by just 0.2%, which was the slowest growth since February.

The Commerce Department reported Friday consumer spending

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