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Surpassing Clinton, Bush and Obama, Trump Rivals Reagan’s Vote Share Record

President Donald Trump holds a reality in Manchester, New Hampshire, on Monday, February 11, 2020.
President Donald Trump holds a reality in Manchester, New Hampshire, on Monday, February 11, 2020.

President Donald Trump has broken the record for the most votes received by an incumbent in the New Hampshire Primary, and rivaled the vote share record. With 86% of precincts reporting, the president received 118,774 votes.

The strong showing for the incumbent president comes after he broke Barack Obama’s record for the most votes received by an incumbent in the Iowa caucuses.

Bernie Sanders Wins the New Hampshire Democratic Primary

Record High for Most Votes Received

The previous record for the most votes received by an incumbent in the New Hampshire Primary was held by George H.W. Bush (92,271). Presidents Barack Obama received 49,080, George W. Bush received 52,962, Bill Clinton earned 76,797 and Ronald Reagan 65,033.

Record High Vote Share Percentages

With 86% of precincts reporting, President Trump received 85.5% of the vote in the New Hampshire Republican Primary. That exceeds George W. Bush (80.96%) and Barack Obama (80.91%), both of whom put up historically solid incumbent vote shares in the Granite State.

Bill Clinton received 84.4%.

Ronald Reagan holds the current vote share record at 86.4%. When all the votes are counted, Donald Trump will likely claim the second slot, though could still exceed the record.

Election 2020: New Hampshire Primary Results

President Donald Trump has broken the record

Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks at the Our Rights Our Courts Forum in New Hampshire.
Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks at the Our Rights Our Courts Forum in New Hampshire.

With 84% of precincts reporting, Bernie Sanders has won the New Hampshire Democratic Primary, harrowingly edging out Pete Buttigieg by roughly 1.4 points.

Election 2020: New Hampshire Primary Results

Senator Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., outperformed her polls and surged into third place with 19.7% of the vote, clearly the beneficiary of the collapse of Joe Biden.

The former vice president, who left the Granite State earlier today for South Carolina, came in fifth place with just 8.4% of the vote.

Trump Breaks Record For Most Votes Received By Incumbent In New Hampshire Primary

With 84% of precincts reporting, Bernie Sanders

Live results of the 2020 New Hampshire Primary, the first in the nation vote casting contest on both sides of the aisle. Leading up to Election Day, Bernie Sanders held a lead in the Granite State, which he carried against Hillary Clinton in 2016 by 22 points, the largest margin ever in a Democratic primary. The state has a long history of supporting neighboring candidates.

100% of precincts reporting
Candidate Votes Pct. Pledged delegates
Bernie Sanders 76,324 25.7% 9
Pete Buttigieg 72,457 24.4 9
Amy Klobuchar 58,796 19.8 6
Elizabeth Warren 27,387 9.2 0
Joseph R. Biden Jr. 24,921 8.4 0
Tom Steyer 10,721 3.6 0
Tulsi Gabbard 9,655 3.3 0
Andrew Yang 8,315 2.8 0
Total Write-ins 4,449 1.5 0
Deval Patrick 1,266 0.4 0
Michael Bennet 963 0.3 0
Cory Booker 155 0.1 0
Joe Sestak 143 0.0 0
Kamala Harris 104 0.0 0
Marianne Williamson 95 0.0 0
Steve Burke 85 0.0 0
John Delaney 82 0.0 0
Julián Castro 81 0.0 0
Robby Wells 81 0.0 0
Tom Koos 70 0.0 0
Michael Ellinger 65 0.0 0
Steve Bullock 62 0.0 0
Henry Hewes 54 0.0 0
David Thistle 53 0.0 0
Sam Sloan 39 0.0 0
Mosie Boyd 33 0.0 0
Ben Gleiberman 31 0.0 0
Thomas Torgesen 30 0.0 0
Mark Greenstein 29 0.0 0
Rita Krichevsky 23 0.0 0
Lorenz Kraus 21 0.0 0
Roque De La Fuente III 12 0.0 0
Jason Dunlap 11 0.0 0
Raymond Moroz 9 0.0 0

296,622 votes, 301 of 301 precincts

Source: New Hampshire Secretary of State and Associated Press (AP)

Polls Favored Bernie Sanders

[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]Live results of the 2020 New Hampshire

Historically High Level for Small Business Owners Planning to Increase Employee Compensation

The Small Business Optimism Index started the new year in the top 10% of all readings, beating the forecast and rising 1.6 points to 104.3 in January. Six of the 10 Index components improved, while two declined and two were unchanged.

Forecasts ranged from a low of 102.9 to a high of 103.5. The consensus forecast was 103.2

The Uncertainty Index edged only 1-point higher to 81 and the percentage of owners expecting better business conditions did slip slightly to 14%. However, sales expectations and earnings trends rose significantly.

“2020 is off to an explosive start for the small business economy, with owners expecting increased sales, earnings, and higher wages for employees,” said NFIB Chief Economist William Dunkelberg. “Small businesses continue to build on the solid foundation of supportive federal tax policies and a deregulatory environment that allows owners to put an increased focus on operating and growing their businesses.”

The net percent of owners expecting higher real sales volumes rose 7 points to 23% and a net 7% of all owners reported higher nominal sales in the past three months, down 2 points from December.

While new job creation jumped in January to an average addition of 0.49 workers per firm, the highest level since March 2019. But 26% reported finding qualified workers as their number one problem. That’s only 1 point lower than the record high measured in August.

Fifty-six percent (56%) reported hiring or trying to hire—a gain of 3 points from December—but 49% reported few or no “qualified” applicants for the positions they were trying to fill.

“Finding qualified labor continues to eclipse taxes or regulations as a top business problem. Small business owners will likely continue offering improved compensation to attract and retain qualified workers in this highly competitive labor market,” Mr. Dunkelberg added.

“Compensation levels will hold firm unless the economy weakens substantially as owners do not want to lose the workers that they already have.”

Total nonfarm payrolls rose 225,000 in January and the unemployment rate ticked only slightly higher to a still low 3.6%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) monthly jobs report. That crushed the consensus forecast, exceeding the high end of the forecast range.

Worth noting, the ADP National Employment Report released two days earlier found the U.S. economy added 291,000 private sector jobs in January.

Historically high percentages of owners plan to raise worker compensation, as they seek to fill open positions.

A net 36% reported raising compensation—an increase of 7 points from December—and a historically high net 24% plan to raise compensation in the coming months, unchanged from December.

Only 8% of small business owners cited labor costs as their top problem.

Those results also appear to back up the jobs report for the month.

Wages, or average hourly earnings (AHE) for all employees on private nonfarm payrolls, increased by 3.1% over the last 12 months in January. AHEs for all employees rose by 7 cents to $28.44.

Wages have increased by at least 3% for 18 straight months.

The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) has conducted the Small Business Optimism Index for 46 year.

The Small Business Optimism Index started the

Bloomberg: ‘We Put All the Cops in Minority Neighborhoods…’ You Have to ‘Throw Them Up Against the Walls and Frisk Them’

Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

Remarks fully supporting the stop and frisk program in 2013 and 2015 have returned to haunt billionaire Michael Bloomberg on the campaign trail. Newly uncovered audio surfaced as the former New York City mayor spent hundreds of millions of dollars attempting to win over black support for the Democratic nomination.

An audio clip from a 2015 speech the billionaire gave to the Aspen Institute, reveals Bloomberg offering a full-throated defend of stop and frisk. He conceded he “put all the cops in minority neighborhoods” because “that’s where all the crime is” and “the way you get the guns out of the kids’ hands is to throw them up against the walls and frisk them.”

The Aspen Times reported at the time that Bloomberg representatives asked the Aspen Institute not to distribute footage of his appearance.

95% of your murders — murderers and murder victims — fit one MO. You can just take the description, Xerox it and pass it out to all the cops. They are male minorities, sixteen to twenty-five.

That’s true in New York. That’s true in virtually every city [inaudible]. And that’s where the real crime is. You’ve got to get the guns out of the hands of the people that are getting killed.

You want to spend the money on a lot of cops in the streets. Put those cops where the crime is, which means in minority neighborhoods. So, one of the unintended consequences is people say, ‘Oh my God, you are arrested kids for marijuana that are all minorities.’

Yes, that’s true. Why? Because we put all the cops in minority neighborhoods. Yes, that’s true. Why do we do it? Because that’s where all the crime is, and the way you get the guns out of the kids’ hands is to throw them up against the walls and frisk them.

And then they start [inaudible—may ‘saying’] ‘Oh, I don’t want to get caught.’ So they don’t bring the gun. They still have a gun but they leave it at home.

Michael Bloomberg in speech to the Aspen Institute in 2015

The audio drop comes as voters head to the polls in the first in the nation primary in New Hampshire. While Bloomberg skipped early states including the Granite State, the audio blunts his surprising win in Dixville Notch.

He received two write-ins votes in the small rural town that holds their election and counts the results at midnight before Election Day. Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg peached received one vote on the Democratic side, while one Michael Bloomberg received 1 write-in vote on the Republican side.

Nevertheless, Bloomberg’s entire strategy hinges on the total collapse of Joe Biden and the rise of Senator Sanders, both of which is happening. It also hangs on earning the support of the black community that was previously with the former vice president.

Bloomberg, who is self-funding his campaign with his vast fortune, was elected mayor after America’s Mayor Rudy Giuliani endorsed him. Without his support, Bloomberg would have been defeated.

He continued Mayor Giuliani’s tough on crime approach and implemented stop and frisk. Critics have called the program racist and Bloomberg now claims he does not support it.

However, Bloomberg’s comments on stop and frisk at the Aspen Institute are not the only remarks he has made in defense of the controversial program.

“I think we disproportionately stop whites too much and minorities too little,” he said in 2013 interview on 710 WOR – The Voice Of New York.

Remarks fully supporting the stop and frisk

Senator Bernie Sanders, D/I-Vt., left, and Senator Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., right, speak at the first Democratic Debate in Miami, Florida on June 26 and 27, 2019.
Senator Bernie Sanders, D/I-Vt., left, and Senator Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., right, speak at the first Democratic Debate in Miami, Florida on June 26 and 27, 2019.

Bernie Sanders is either maintaining or opening up a lead in the final New Hampshire Democratic Primary polls. With less than one day to go before voting begins on Tuesday, the momentum Pete Buttigieg enjoyed out of Iowa appears to have faded and even receded.

New Hampshire has a long history of supporting neighboring or hometown candidates. Bernie leads in the latest average of polls in New Hampshire by roughly 5 points, and fellow-neighbor Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren is fighting for third place against former Vice President Joe Biden.

Noon EST UPDATE: Polling average updated. Bernie Sanders now leads by 6.5 points.

The Boston Globe/Suffolk tracking poll caused an uproar on Saturday when it showed Buttigieg edging out Sanders by 1 point. Bernie had led every poll in the Granite State since January. On Sunday, he retook a 2-point lead over the former mayor of South Bend, Indiana.

The WHDH 7 News/ Emerson College tracking poll foundd Senator Sanders opening up a 10-point lead on Sunday, which tapered back to 7 points. Spencer Kimball, Director of Emerson College Polling, conceded the challenger could still pull off a surprise in New Hampshire.

“While Sanders has a lead going into the election, Buttigieg has closed the gap and could still pull off a New Hampshire surprise, as he and Sanders are within the margin of error,” he said. “Klobuchar continues to move up, but she still trails the top two candidates by a significant margin.”

“Warren and Biden could still get as high as third but today’s data had them going in the wrong direction. ”

The surprise surge of Senator Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., is confirmed only by the Boston Globe/Suffolk tracking poll, though the results in Iowa and anecdotal conversations with voters do indicate her star is at least somewhat on the rise.

This article and the 2020 New Hampshire Democratic Primary Poll Tracker will be updated throughout the day if and when new polls are released.

Bernie Sanders is either maintaining or opening

Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., left, and Senator Bernie Sanders, D-I-Vt., right, graphic concept.
Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., left, and Senator Bernie Sanders, D-I-Vt., right, graphic concept.

Politicians such as Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez say that their goal of “democratic socialism” is very different from the socialism of CubaNorth Korea, and Venezuela, as well as the socialism of the former Soviet Union.

And they doubtlessly would get very upset if anyone equated their ideology with the “national socialism” of Hitler’s Germany.

Such angst would be understandable. There are profound differences among the various versions of socialism. At the risk of understatement, a politician who wants to take my money is much better than one who wants to take my life.

From the perspective of economic policy, though, there’s a common link. All strains of socialism reject free enterprise. They want to replace capitalism with some sort of regime based on government planning and coercion.

This observation gets some people rather upset.

In a column for the Washington Post, Ronald Granieri of the Foreign Policy Research Institute expresses dismay that some people are pointing out that Hitler’s National Socialist Workers’ Party was, well, socialist.

Did you know that “Nazi” is short for “National Socialist”? That means that Hitler and his henchmen were all socialists. …There is only one problem: This argument is untrue. Although the Nazis did pursue a level of government intervention in the economy that would shock doctrinaire free marketeers, their “socialism” was at best a secondary element in their appeal. …The Nazi regime had little to do with socialism, despite it being prominently included in the name of the National SocialistGerman Workers’ Party. …The NSDAP’s 1920 party program, the 25 points, included passages denouncing banks, department stores and “interest slavery,” which suggested a quasi-Marxist rejection of free markets. But these were also typical criticisms in the anti-Semitic playbook …linking socialism and Nazism to critique leftist ideas became a political weapon in the post-World War II period, perhaps unsurprisingly given that the Cold War followed directly on the heels of World War II. Scholars as diverse as Zbigniew Brzezinski and Hannah Arendt used the larger concept of “totalitarianism” to fuse the two. …National Socialism preserved private property, while also putting the entire resources of society at the service of an expansionist and racist national vision, which included the conquest and murderous subjugation of other peoples. It makes no sense to think that the sole, or even the primary, negative aspect of this regime was the fact that it used state power to allocate financial resources.

Mr. Granieri makes some very good points. I’m not a historian, but I assume he’s correct in stating that Nazis hated capitalism in large part because it was associated with Jews.

And he’s definitely correct in stating that there are much more important reasons to despise Nazis other than their version of socialism—private ownership, but government control, often referred to as fascism.

But none of that changes that fact that all forms of socialism involve hostility to capitalism. Especially among the most repugnant forms of socialism.

Indeed, Nazism and communism are like different sides of the same coin. Joshua Hofford, in a column for the Foundation for Economic Education, examines the commonalities and differences between the two ideologies.

Karl Marx and Frederick Engels are the fathers of both…the swastika and the hammer-and-sickle. …The platform for Soviet socialism was nearly identical to that of National Socialism under the Nazi Party. Though the application of Soviet socialism was Marxian in nature—committed to international socialist revolution and the elimination of class enemies—and National Socialism under the Nazi Party was instituted to the elimination of racial enemies, both were dedicated to the remaking of mankind… Endemic to both Soviet and Nazi socialism, the destruction of class and racial enemies was a literal, not figurative, stage of revolution. …both versions of socialism were dedicated to constructing a new social reality by any means necessary… In addition to belonging to the shared brotherhood of worldwide socialism, clearly, both communism and Nazism were equally totalitarian. …The Nazis rejected the call to international revolution and the class warfare of their Soviet Marxist kin, however, this made them no less socialist. All substantial power and ownership of German business under the Third Reich, while managed and owned by individuals, was in the hands of the state. Price controls, salary caps, and production quotas were set by the nation and left owners to navigate a glut of bureaucracy.

In a column for the Wall Street Journal, Juliana Pilon shares a historical tidbit to illustrate the disdain for capitalism that characterized Nazis and communists.

Known officially as the Treaty of Non-Aggression Between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the Hitler-Stalin pact…stunned the world. …As German negotiator Karl Schnurre had observed…, “there is one common element in the ideologies of Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union: opposition to the capitalist democracies. Neither we nor Italy have anything in common with the capitalist West. Therefore it seems to us rather unnatural that a socialist state would stand on the side of the Western democracies.” …capitalist democracy was their common enemy.

And Michael Rieger, writing for FEE, notes that there are genuine differences among different strains of socialism, though all involve a powerful state.

The Nazis didn’t call their ideology “national socialism” because they thought it sounded good. They were fervently opposed to capitalism. The Nazi Party’s chief propagandist, Joseph Goebbels, even once remarked that he’d sooner live under Bolshevism than capitalism. …why…would the Nazis call themselves “socialists”? In part, it’s because the term “socialism” has been constantly evolving and changing since its inception. …Marxist-Leninists came to more narrowly define “socialism” to mean the intermediary period between capitalism and communism where the state owned the means of production and centrally managed the economy. In establishing national socialism, the Nazis sought to redefine socialism yet again. National socialism began as a fusion of socialist ideas of a technocratically-managed economy with Völkisch nationalism, a deeply anti-Semitic form of German nationalism. …The Nazis also distinguished themselves from Marxists in their support for private property, although this came with some caveats. The Nazi government did not own the means of production in Germany, but they certainly controlled them. They set up control boards, cartels, and state-sponsored monopolies and konzerns, which they then carefully planned and regulated. …democratic socialists don’t believe in total government ownership of the means of production, nor do they wish to technocratically manage the economy as the Nazis did. …The wide variance between utopian socialism, communism, national socialism, and democratic socialism makes it remarkably easy for members of each ideology to wag their fingers at the others and say, “That wasn’t real socialism.” …all self-described socialists have shared the belief that top-down answers to society’s problems are superior to the bottom-up answers created by the free market.

To add to the above excerpts, here are two passages from Paul Johnson’s Modern Times: The World from the Twenties to the Nineties.

  • Page 133: “Hitler took over a small proletarian group called the German Workers’ Party…and reorganized its economic aims into a radical twenty-five point programme: …abolition of unearned incomes, state to take over trusts and share profits of industry, land for national needs to be expropriated without compensation. he also added the words ‘National Socialist’ to its title. …the radical and socialist element in his programme always remained strong.”
  • Page 293: “He regarded himself as a socialist, and the essence of his socialism was that every individual or group in the state should unhesitatingly work for national policy. So it did not matter who owned the actual factory so long as those managing it did what they were told. …’Our socialism reaches much deeper. …Why should we need to socialize the banks and the factories? We are socializing the people.”

I’ll close by re-sharing my humble contribution to this discussion, which is a triangle to replace the traditional right-vs-left line.

My triangle acknowledges that there are differences between communists and Nazis (as well as between populists and democratic socialists, and between Republicans and Democrats).

But it makes the key point that there are ever-greater losses of economic liberty as one descends from libertarianism.

And the closer you get to the bottom of the triangle, the greater the likelihood that you lose political liberty as well.

P.S. I also recommend reading what Friedrich HayekDan Hannan, and Thomas Sowell have written on this topic.

P.P.S. I also think we can learn something from this tweet by Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut.

As a matter of economic policy, Nazism

Bernie Reclaims Lead in New Hampshire Primary Tracking Poll, If He Ever Lost It

Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks at the Our Rights Our Courts Forum in New Hampshire.
Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks at the Our Rights Our Courts Forum in New Hampshire.

Bernie Sanders is either opening up a lead or retaking it over Pete Buttigieg in the latest New Hampshire Democratic Primary polls. With just two days to go before voting begins on Tuesday, February 11, the momentum Buttigieg enjoyed out of Iowa at least appears to have faded or stabilized.

Bernie leads in the latest average of polls in New Hampshire by 5.4 points.

The Boston Globe/Suffolk tracking poll caused an uproar on Saturday when it showed Buttigieg edging out Sanders by 1 point. Until then, Bernie led every poll in the Granite State since January. He retook a 2-point lead on Sunday.

However, the WHDH 7 News/ Emerson College tracking poll finds Senator Sanders opening up a 10-point lead over Mayor Pete.

“Both Sanders and Buttigieg received a bounce in our poll numbers since Iowa, but it looks like the debate on Friday may have stymied momentum for the front runners,” Spencer Kimball, Director of Emerson College Polling, noted of the latest results.

“The candidate who seems to have been able to take advantage of the event is Klobuchar who gained four points.”

The NBC News/Marist poll conducted from February 4 – 6 found Sanders leading by 4 points. A CNN/University of New Hampshire poll conducted February 4 – 7 gave Sanders a 7-point lead.

Bernie Sanders is either opening up a

Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

One of the most significant developments in 2020 politics is how Democratic presidential candidates have embraced hard-left economic policies.

Prominent analysts on the left have noted that even Joe Biden, ostensibly the most moderate of the candidates, has a very statist economic platform when compared to Barack Obama.

And “Crazy Bernie” and “Looney Liz” have made radicalism a central tenet of their campaigns.

So where does Michael Bloomberg, the former mayor of New York City, fit on the spectrum?

The New York Times has a report on Bloomberg’s tax plan. Here are some of the key provisions, all of which target investors, entrepreneurs, small business owners, and other high-income taxpayers.

Former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg of New York unveiled a plan on Saturday that would raise an estimated $5 trillion in new tax revenue… The proposal includes a repeal of President Trump’s 2017 tax cuts for high earners, along with a new 5 percent “surcharge” on incomes above $5 million per year. It would raise capital gains taxes for Americans earning more than $1 million a year and…it would partially repeal Mr. Trump’s income tax cuts for corporations, raising their rate to 28 percent from 21 percent. …Mr. Bloomberg’s advisers estimate his increases would add up to $5 trillion of new taxes spread over the course of a decade, in order to finance new spending on health care, housing, infrastructure and other initiatives. That amount is nearly 50 percent larger than the tax increases proposed by the most fiscally moderate front-runner in the race, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. …Mr. Bloomberg’s advisers said it was possible that he would propose additional measures to raise even more revenue, depending on how his other domestic spending plans develop.

These are all terrible proposals. And you can see even more grim details at Bloomberg’s campaign website.

Every provision will penalize productive behavior.

But there is a bit of good news.

Though it would be more accurate to say that there’s a partial absence of additional bad news.

Bloomberg hasn’t embraced some of the additional bad ideas being pushed by other Democratic candidates.

It would…maintain a limit on federal deductions of state and local tax payments set under the 2017 law, which some Democrats have pushed to eliminate. …the plan notably does not endorse the so-called wealth tax favored by several of the more liberal candidates in the race, like Senators Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.

I’m definitely happy he hasn’t embraced a wealth tax, and it’s also good news that he doesn’t want to restore the state and local tax deduction, which encouraged profligacy in states such as California, New Jersey, and Illinois.

It also appears he doesn’t want to tax unrealized capital gains, which is another awful idea embraced by many of the other candidates.

But an absence of some bad policies isn’t the same as a good policy.

And if you peruse his website, you’ll notice there isn’t a single tax cut or pro-growth proposal. It’s a taxapalooza, what you expect from a France-based bureaucracy, not from an American businessman.

To add insult to injury, Bloomberg wants all these taxes to finance an expansion in the burden of government spending.

For what it’s worth, this is my estimate of what will happen to America’s tax burden (based on the latest government data) if Bloomberg is elected and he successfully imposes all his proposed tax increases. We’ll have a more punitive tax system that extracts a much greater share of people’s money.

P.S Take these numbers with a grain of salt because they assume that Bloomberg’s tax increases will actually collect $5 trillion of revenue (which won’t happen because of the Laffer Curve) and that GDP won’t be adversely affected (which isn’t true because there will be much higher penalties on productive behavior).

Bloomberg released a tax plan that will

Wage Growth in January Ticks Higher, December Revised Higher

Wages, or average hourly earnings (AHE) increased by 3.1% over the last 12 months in January and have risen by at least 3% for 18 consecutive months. AHEs for all employees rose by 7 cents to $28.44, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) monthly jobs report.

In December, 12-month wage growth was initially reported at 2.9%, but the reporting period cut off and underestimated the rate of growth. It was revised higher to 3.0%.

“Wages have increased by 3% or more for 18 consecutive months after December revisions and another strong performance in January,” U.S. Secretary of Labor Eugene Scalia said in a statement. “Production and non-supervisory wages increased even faster than managers’, continuing the blue collar boom.”

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Wages, or average hourly earnings (AHE) increased

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