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Guantanamo_Bay_Prison_Camp

In this file photo taken Tuesday May 12, 2009 and reviewed by the U.S. military, a soldier stands guard at the front gate entrance to the Camp 6 maximum-security detention facility, at Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base, Cuba. (Photo: AP)

The Obama administration said early Sunday that it had transferred six Guantanamo Bay detainees to Uruguay for resettlement as refugees. The move takes the White House one step further to closing down the detention center amid growing pressure from the president’s left, according to a recent report.

The six men, which have been detained as suspected militants with ties to Al Qaeda to a period of twelve years, had never been charged. In a statement, the Pentagon identified the men as four Syrians, a Tunisian and a Palestinian. They are the first Guantanamo Bay prisoners to be sent to South America and had been cleared for release since at least 2010.

However, they could not be sent home the U.S. couldn’t find countries willing to take them with “refugee” status.

The transfer freed 43-year-old Abu Wa’el Dhiab, a Syrian-born prisoner on a long-term hunger strike in protest of his confinement. Dhiab was the center figure of a legal battle in U.S. courts over the military’s force-feeding of prisoners who refuse to eat at the Guantanamo Bay detention center.

The other Syrians sent to Uruguay on Saturday were identified by the Pentagon as Ali Husain Shaaban, 32; Ahmed Adnan Ajuri, 37; and Abdelahdi Faraj, 39. Palestinian prisoner Mohammed Abdullah Taha Mattan, 35, and 49-year-old Adel bin Muhammad El Ouerghi of Tunisia, were also among the released.

The latest release brings the total number of prisoners at Guantanamo to 136 — which is the lowest number since the first month the prison opened in January 2002. The Obama administration said that the men no longer pose a threat, even though they cannot be allowed to return to their countries of origin.

However, a recent report  by PPD highlighted that U.S. intel officials believe upwards of 20 to 30 Guantanamo Bay detainees released by the Obama administration have joined the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Yet, the White House refused to comment on the possibility of other detainees — including these six detainees — rejoining the fight in the future. Instead, they praised Uruguay for their cooperation.

“We are very grateful to Uruguay for this important humanitarian action, and to President Mujica for his strong leadership in providing a home for individuals who cannot return to their own countries,” U.S. State Department envoy Clifford Sloan said.

Mujica had agreed to take the men in January, but the long-standing fight between the administration and Congress prevented the White House from pulling the trigger on the transfer.

The Obama administration didn’t notify Congress of its intent to transfer the detainees to Uruguay until July, despite current laws passed in a broad bipartisan fashion that prohibit the executive branch from releasing Guantanamo Bay detainees without first providing notice to Congress in ample advance and receiving congressional approval.

Prisoners have been sent to various countries around the world, but never have so many transfers in nations located in the Western Hemisphere. In 2009, four were sent to Bermuda and, in 2012, two were sent to El Salvador.

The Associated Press reported that Obama administration officials have been frustrated that the transfer took so long and blame outgoing Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel for not approving the move sooner. Hagel, who recently resigned amid growing pressure from the White House to play scapegoat for various foreign policy failures and Democrats’ midterm defeats, offered no response or explanation for the delay.

The handoff was further delayed until after Uruguay’s October presidential election and late-November runoff when the transfer became a campaign issue. On Friday, Mujica reiterated his willingness to accept the detainees in an open letter to President Obama that appeared on the Uruguay leader’s official website.

Even though President Obama pledged to close the prison upon taking office, the policy was blocked by both Republicans and Democrats in Congress. Bipartisan legislation banned sending prisoners to the U.S. for any reason, including trial, and placed restrictions on sending them abroad.

A recent Government Accountability Office investigation concluded that the Obama administration violated the law when it ordered the Pentagon to swap the Taliban Five detainees for Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, a known deserter who was held prisoner in Afghanistan for five years after abandoning his post. The government watchdog agency said the administration’s failure to notify the relevant congressional committees at least 30 days in advance of the exchange was a clear violation of the law.

Nevertheless, the slow pace of releases had been cited as a cause for the hunger strike that began in February 2013, and at one time included as many as 100 prisoners, including Dhiab and Faraj.

The restrictions on sending them overseas have been eased and the U.S. has released 19 prisoners so far this year. According to a recent report, administration officials, say several more are expected by the end of the year, despite public opinion overwhelmingly opposing the policy.

“The closing of Guantanamo Bay and releasing of detainees remains a radical left position in America,” says PPD’s senior political analyst Rich Baris, who has examined public opinion on the issue for years. “The anti-Guantanamo crowd is loud, but they have been in the minority since Obama first made the issue a central campaign promise in 2008. Even a majority of Democrats oppose that idea.”

The Obama administration said early Sunday that

Republican Representative Bill Cassidy has easily defeated incumbent Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu in the Louisiana Senate runoff, 57 to 43 percent with 98 percent of precincts reporting. Landrieu was forced into a runoff in November when she failed to get over 50 percent of the vote.

Even though Landrieu slightly edged out Cassidy 42 – 41 percent, which was a difference of just over 16,000 votes, tea party candidate Rob Maness, who finished with 14 percent, threw his full support behind Cassidy and actively campaigned for him in more conservative precincts.

But digging a little deeper, she never had enough white voter support to win. Landrieu polled at just 20 percent of the white vote in PPD’s tracking survey and, according to exit polls, she only won 18 percent on Election Day. She would’ve needed 30 percent — at least — to overcome the 19 percent of voters who backed Maness but switched their vote for Cassidy.

Actually, “at least” may have been an understatement, because early voters in the Louisiana runoff were more Republican than early voters in last month’s election. White voters represented roughly 65 percent of early voters in November, but they were 70 percent leading up until the runoff. Meanwhile, registered Republicans represented 34 percent of early voters in November, but they were 39 percent of early voters for the runoff.

The weeks following November’s midterm elections were bad for Landrieu. A source at the DSCC told PPD immediately after the election they would be pulling their money out of the Louisiana Senate race.

They did.

Then, Landrieu quickly moved to resurrect the House Keystone pipeline bill in a last-minute attempt to tout her her Washington clout. Landrieu was scrambling to find one more senator in the run-up to the critical vote on the Keystone XL pipeline, but she’s failed. The still Democratic-controlled Senate voted down approval of the Keystone XL pipeline, further derailed by her party’s far left turn post-elections.

Finally, in just this past week, PPD published a video showing Democrat Mayor of Opelousas Don Cravins Sr. endorsing mass Louisiana voter fraud on November 3, 2014. Cravins’ son is none other than Sen. Landrieu’s chief of staff.

Landrieu has become the fifth Democratic incumbent senator to have been defeated in the 2014 midterm elections, bringing the GOP tally to a net 9 seats and far surpassing the two incumbents they defeated in the 1980 elections. With Landrieu going down in defeat, the last vestiges of the old Democratic South will be swept away, as the party’s staunch left turn and failure to respond to constituents on ObamaCare and other issues have ended the careers of Democrats up and down the ballot.

She had a scant 19 percent of winning, according to PPD’s 2014 Senate Map Predictions model, the most accurate election projection model on the Internet for 2014.

Republican Representative Bill Cassidy has easily defeated

christie bridge closing

A federal report, which was leaked to and covered by PPD several months ago, clears NJ Gov. Chris Christie in the media-trumped up bridgegate controversy.

TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey Democrats probing politically motivated traffic jams near the George Washington Bridge last year have found no evidence that Gov. Chris Christie was involved. They did, however, claim they were unable to interview several witnesses, though gave no indication what those witnesses might have even offered.

“At present, there is no conclusive evidence as to whether Governor Chris Christie was or was not aware of the lane closures either in advance of their implementation or contemporaneously as they were occurring,” according to the report.

Meanwhile, the news seemed to come as little surprise to the Christie camp, who released a statement in the aftermath of the report.

“The Committee has finally acknowledged what we reported nine months ago — namely, that there is not a shred of evidence Governor Christie knew anything about the GWB lane realignment beforehand or that any current member of his staff was involved in that decision,” Christie attorney Randy Mastro said in a statement.

Investigators found no evidence that Christie was aware of the lane closures, but they say that two former Christie aides acted with “perceived impunity” and with little regard for public safety when they ordered the lanes closed, according to a 136-page interim report by a joint legislative panel.

A federal official in September leaked the results of their probe, which also found that there was no evidence suggesting Christie was connected to the lane closures. In a radio interview with New Jersey 101.5’s Eric Scott Thursday evening, Gov. Christie said he wasn’t surprised but would still remain cautious.

“We will wait to hear whatever the authorities have to say, but certainly this is a report that comes as no shock to me because as you know, Eric, the day after these events were uncovered, I came out and told people that I had no knowledge of this going on and no involvement or any role in its planning,” Christie said.

Yet, despite the fact that New Jersey Democrats didn’t refute the validity of the report, they refused to acknowledge its weight against their own investigation, which obviously, turned up nothing in the end.

“This is not a Chris Christie investigation,”Assemblyman John Wisniewski said in a statement at the time. “It’s an investigation as to why this happened and who authorized it. As a consequence, this does not change our position.”

As PPD noted at the time, many headlines by “mainstream” publications — who are foaming at the mouth to destroy the man who began leading Hillary Clinton after his big reelection win — were rather misleading.

Reports explicitly cited the Christie bridge closing “scandal” was to “retaliate” against the governor’s politics enemies. This is insinuating the communication spells that out verbatim, which they in fact, do not if you read the emails. Still, even if they did without mention to the governor, the double-standard for Wisniewski and an adoring media was obvious.

A review by the Media Research Center found a disproportionate amount of coverage attacking Gov. Christie over “BridgeGate,” while ignoring bombshell stories of IRS emails clearly debunking the “few rogue agents” narrative pushed by President Obama in the wake of the IRS targeting scandal.

In less than 48 hours, ABC, CBS and NBC deluged viewers with coverage of Chris Christie’s traffic jam scandal, devoting a staggering 88 minutes to the story. In comparison, these same news outlets over the last six months have allowed a scant two minutes for the latest on Barack Obama’s Internal Revenue Service scandal. The disparity in less than two days is 44-to-one. [See a chart.]

However, whether they anti-Christie forces succeeded in derailing the only man who seemed posed to defeat Hillary Clinton in 2016, is still unclear. A recently released Quinnipiac University Poll shows Christie once again leading Clinton, while her overall star power is certainly fading. She led little-known GOP candidates by 1 to 5 points, despite the fact she was well-known. Her Republican opponents, on the other hand, had plenty of room to grow.

New Jersey Democrats probing politically motivated Ft.

miley_cyrus

Dec 31, 2013. Miley Cyrus performs in Times Square during New Year’s Eve celebrations in New York. Cyrus is kicking off her North American Bangerz tour Feb. 14, 2014, in Vancouver. (Photo: AP)

Does anyone even recognize the Disney superstar Hannah Montana, anymore? It would appear that the wild side of Miley Cyrus is still on the loose, despite confirming she is dating Maria Shriver and Arnold Schwarzenegger’s son Patrick. It would appear Patrick had himself a heck of a time Thursday night?

He and Cyrus were club hopping in Miami on Thursday night, hitting the Bootsy Bellows pop-up at Shore Club and 1OAK at Rec Room before they ended their night at E11EVEN, where they did not leave until 5:30 A.M. ET.

It was at E11EVEN where they ran into Paris Hilton, and a source told FOX411 they saw Cyrus making out with the hotel heiress.

“The three left [together], helping each other out,” our source recalled.

Miami is crawling with celebrities who are in town for Art Basel, which is an annual celebration that showcases art and performances from their various peers. Still, not all of them are as publicly sleazy as the former child icon and daughter of country singer, Billy Ray Cyrus.

Thursday night, Robert Pattinson was seen backstage at his rumored girlfriend FKA twigs’ performance at the YoungArts Campus, according to the report.

“They were super sweet together,” the source told FOX411. “He stayed backstage and watched her entire show, gave her a hug and kiss when she was finished.”

Miley Cyrus, on the other hand, has become yet one more childhood star who made the journey from adolescence to adulthood in the spotlight via the sleaze train.

Accompanied by her new boyfriend, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s

US-China_Relations_New_China

Image File: U.S. flag, left, fades into the flag symbolizing the rising Asian power run from Beijing, China.

For the first time in decades and ahead of projections, China has surpassed the U.S. as the worlds largest economy, the International Monetary Fund said. The IMF recently released the latest numbers for the world economy, stating that China will produce $17.6 trillion in terms of goods and services, juxtaposed to $17.4 trillion for the U.S. economy.

The U.S. produced nearly three times as much as the Chinese only 14 short years ago, according to Dow Jones’ MarketWatch reported. However, there are some key factors leading experts to question the report.

Each country reports its data in its own currency, and in order to accurately compare said data, each country’s statistics must be converted into a common currency. However, there is no one way to do so, and the several different methods available to calculate that conversion conclude very different results.

Another measure of an economy’s strength is its “purchasing power parity,” otherwise known as PPP, which is the rate the currency of one country would have to be converted into another country’s currency to buy the same amount of goods and services in each country.

According to the IMF, China now accounts for 16.5 percent of the global economy when measured through PPP, compared with 16.3 percent for the U.S.

Because prices aren’t the same in each country, a man’s suit for instance will cost you less in Shanghai than in San Francisco. In other words, comparing countries without taking these and other factors into account doesn’t always prove terribly reliable. Ironically, considering their communist philosophy, an average Chinese citizen earns far less than the average American. Therefore, when converting a Chinese salary into dollars, it underestimates how much purchasing power is held by that particular person and that country as a whole. Thus, the IMF measures both GDP in market-exchange terms, and PPP terms.

On the purchasing-power basis, China is overtaking the U.S. right now and becoming the world’s biggest economy.

MarketWatch columnist Brett Arends suggests that if you just look at international exchange rates, the U.S economy is still larger than China’s allegedly by almost 70 percent. But, Arends adds, although these measures are commonly cited, they can also be unreliable.

Experts have predicted China’s economy would surpass America’s for years and recent conventional wisdom anticipated the change this year. Even though China’s economy may perhaps be the world’s largest economy, it’s still not the richest. GDP per capita is still less than a quarter of U.S. levels, the Financial Times reported.

For the first time in decades and

somers-hostage

Dec. 4, 2014: Luke Somers, an American photojournalist born in Britain and held hostage by al-Qaida’s affiliate in Yemen. (Photo: AP)

American freelance photographer Luke Somers, who was kidnapped by Al Qaeda militants in Yemen in 2013, was ‘murdered’ Friday during a U.S. special operations rescue mission. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel said in a statement said it ordered the mission inside the Al Qaeda-infested country after it was learned that his life was in imminent danger.

Somers was still alive when U.S. forces made contact with him, but was badly injured. U.S. official said Somers was shot by militants beforehand and another hostage was dead, but none of the special forces members were injured.

Hagel said in the statement that the rescue bid was conducted in partnership with the Yemeni government, which included drone strikes. In total, the attack between the troops and drones resulted in the killing of ten Al Qaeda militants.

According to the Gift of the Givers, a South African aid group, the South African hostage Pierre Korkie was the other hostage killed in the operation. President Obama released a statement early Saturday morning condemning the “barbaric murder” of Somers and said his grief was “beyond words.”

Lucy Somers, the photojournalist’s sister, told The Associated Press that she and her father learned of her 33-year-old brother’s death from FBI agents at 12 A.M. ET Saturday.

“We ask that all of Luke’s family members be allowed to mourn in peace,” Lucy Somers said from London.

Yemen’s national security chief, Maj. Gen. Ali al-Ahmadi, said the militants planned to kill Luke Somers on Saturday.

“Al Qaeda promised to conduct the execution (of Somers) today so there was an attempt to save them but unfortunately they shot the hostage before or during the attack,” al-Ahmadi said at a conference in Manama, Bahrain. “He was freed but unfortunately he was dead.”

AQAP, or Yemen’s local Al Qaeda branch, the Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, posted a video Thursday threatening to kill Somers in three days if the United States didn’t meet the group’s demands, which weren’t specified. He was kidnapped in September 2013 from Sanaa.

The death of Somers and the failed rescue missions comes shortly after a U.S. drone strike in Yemen killed nine alleged Al Qaeda militants early Saturday. Yemeni security officials confirmed the strike, which was widely believed to be conducted by the United States at dawn in Yemen’s southern Shabwa province, finding its mark at a suspected Al Qaeda safe-house.

Before her brother’s death, Lucy Somers released an online video describing him as a romantic who “always believes the best in people.”

“Please let him live,” she said in closing.

Somers’ father, Michael, also said in his statement that his son was “a good friend of Yemen and the Yemeni people” and pleaded for his safe release.

Korkie was kidnapped in the Yemeni city of Taiz in May 2013, along with his wife Yolande. His wife later was released returned to South Africa. A non-governmental group, Gift of the Givers, helped mediate her release. Those close to Korkie said al-Qaida militants demanded a $3 million ransom for his release.

“The psychological and emotional devastation to Yolande and her family will be compounded by the knowledge that Pierre was to be released by Al Qaeda tomorrow,” Gift of Givers said in a statement Saturday. “A team of Abyan leaders met in Aden this morning and were preparing the final security and logistical arrangements, related to hostage release mechanisms, to bring Pierre to safety and freedom. It is even more tragic that the words we used in a conversation with Yolande at 5.59 this morning was `The wait is almost over.”‘

In a statement Thursday, Pentagon press secretary Rear Adm. John Kirby acknowledged for the first time that a mysterious U.S. raid last month had sought to rescue Somers but that he turned out not to be at the site. The U.S. considers Yemen’s Al Qaeda branch to be the world’s most dangerous arm of the group as it has been linked to several failed attacks on the U.S. homeland.

Kirby did not elaborate on the joint U.S-Yemeni operation to free Somers, saying details remained classified.

However, officials have said the raid targeted a remote Al Qaeda safe haven in a desert region near the Saudi border. Eight captives — including Yemenis, a Saudi and an Ethiopian — were freed. Somers, a Briton and four others had been moved days earlier.

Somers, who was born in Britain and earned a bachelor’s degree in creative writing while attending Beloit College in Wisconsin, was kidnapped in September 2013 as he left a supermarket in the Yemeni capital, Sanaa. Fakhri al-Arashi, chief editor of the National Yemen, offered details on the kidnapping from what he had gathered over time. The National Yemen is where Somers worked as a copy editor and a freelance photographer during the 2011 uprising in Yemen.

Somers, who was born in Britain, earned a bachelor’s degree in creative writing while attending Beloit College in Wisconsin from 2004 through 2007.

American freelance photographer Luke Somers, who was

uva_phi_kappa_psi_frat_house

The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house at University of Virginia did not host a party on the night of the alleged attack, according to fraternity officials. (Photo: AP)

Rolling Stone Magazine has lost a good deal — if not all to many in the media — of their credibility publishing a bogus story of a campus gang rape at University of Virginia. The magazine initially stood by the story, which faced immediate criticism after it was published in the Nov. 19 edition. However, now exposed as a fraud, they released a statement Friday changing their tone.

“In the face of new information, there now appear to be discrepancies in Jackie’s account, and we have come to the conclusion that our trust in her was misplaced,” Rolling Stone Managing Editor Will Dana said in a statement. “We were trying to be sensitive to the unfair shame and humiliation many women feel after a sexual assault and now regret the decision to not contact the alleged assaulters to get their account. We are taking this seriously and apologize to anyone who was affected by the story.”

The extensive 9,000-word story, titled “A Rape on Campus,” claimed a young female freshman was gang raped at a fraternity party in 2012. The author, freelance writer Sabrina Rubin Erdely, harshly condemned the school, which she criticized for lacking a “radical feminist culture seeking to upend the patriarchy.”

Even though The Washington Post has now begun to scrutinize the account, it was only until alternative online media outlets began to shed light on the vast number of discrepancies that The Post and others joined the party. In fact, a Washington Post profile of Erdely was published in the days following the publishing, in which Erdely admits her goal was to drum up a sexual assault story and that she specifically targeted UVA or others, because “none of those schools felt quite right.”

For what, exactly?

Initially, before the heightened scrutiny of her fabricated story, Erdely refused to even say whether she even knew the names of the alleged rapists. Late Monday, Erdely’s editor said Rolling Stone Magazine “verified their existence” by talking to Jackie’s friends, yet they claimed they were unable to reach them.

Really?

The magazine said Erdely and fact-checkers had spent months on the story and concluded Jackie and her story were credible. That may explain some of the enormous lie perpetuated in the story, but if that statement was true, then they would have discovered the multiple — and, easy uncovered — problems with the account.

To begin with, the fraternity named in the story, Phi Kappa Psi, didn’t even host a party on Sept. 28, 2012, the night the sexual assault allegedly occurred. Jackie also alleged the young man who first took her to dinner before they headed back to the frat house was a lifeguard, however, there are no lifeguards in the fraternity.

“First, the 2012 roster of employees at the Aquatic and Fitness Center does not list a Phi Kappa Psi as a lifeguard,” the fraternity said in a statement Friday. “Second, the Chapter did not have a date function or a social event during the weekend of September 28th, 2012.”

It gets worse. The story also claimed that pledges were in the fall and, in fact, initiations were apparently more important than getting Jackie to a hospital with “her face beaten, dress spattered with blood.”

“Andy seconded the opinion, adding that since he and Randall both planned to rush fraternities, they ought to think this through,” Erdely elaborates in the story. “The three friends launched into a heated discussion about the social price of reporting Jackie’s rape.”

Except, there are no initiations in the fall.

“Third, our Chapter’s pledging and initiation periods, as required by the University and Inter-Fraternity Council, take place solely in the spring semester and not in the fall semester,” the fraternity said. “We document the initiation of new members at the end of each spring. Moreover, no ritualized sexual assault is part of our pledging or initiation process. This notion is vile, and we vehemently refute this claim.”

All of this information was easily obtainable prior to the story being published. Jackie’s friends say her story has changed repeatedly and her claims — conveniently — can no longer be verified. But abiding by proper standards of investigative journalism wouldn’t have fit the radical, liberal feminist narrative routinely pushed by Rolling Stone.

“This has been an absolutely devastating blow to Rolling Stone’s credibility,” said Mollie Hemingway, a media critic and senior editor at The Federalist. “[Erdely] has a lot to answer for as well. She literally took the memories of one person who claimed to have been traumatized and built an entire story around it.”

However, even Hemingway admitted that she bought into the story until recently, which underscores a larger problem with elitist media outlets and their so-called critics. Whether Erdely deliberately fabricated details in a story and reported them as facts, is wholly irrelevant. She mixed a fake, unsubstantiated story with figures from the widely debunked 2005-2007 Campus Sexual Assault Study, and pushed it all as a packaged truth.

The so-called online survey of just two schools found that 1 in 5 female college students are sexually assaulted, a claim often regurgitated by the White House that was previously debunked on PPD.

Even the liberal-leaning Washington Post Fact Checker, Glenn Kessler, highlighted that the so-called online study yielded a staggeringly low response rate for such a magnanimous claim, though there are far more troubling irregularities.

For starters, two-thirds of the college women cited in the study — and, counted as rape victims — were drug or alcohol related instances, with the victims themselves saying they did not think they were raped. What do you expect when the study counts kissing as rape, despite never asking the female respondents specifically about rape? Further, only a handful out of these particular “victims” even reported suffering from some degree of psychological harm.

“Drug- and/or alcohol-enabled sexual assault” represented roughly 70 percent of all the “rape” incidents in the study, consisting of flat-out cases of intoxication. Just to clarify, getting drunk and making a bad decision is not the same as passing out and being sexually assaulted by a predator, man or woman. Intoxication can blur the lines of consent, as well as result in someone giving it who might have otherwise declined to give it.

The outrage against Rolling Stone Magazine is growing and warranted, though it is unclear whether it will remain at the forefront of readers’ minds or give pause to media seeking to cite their now-untrustworthy work. Considering the setback the fictitious story will cause the real movement to intellectually address campus sexual assault — one that doesn’t include the radical left feminist movement, which cares more for exploiting women and children with wedge issues to expand government — many feel it would be just if their credibility suffers long-term damage.

This story stinks of indoctrination from radicals like Kathleen Hirsch, who in 1990 wrote Fraternities of Fear: Gang Rape, Male Bonding, and the Silencing of Women, a work that serves as a clarion call to leftist feminists who care more about inciting outrage by citing fictitious statistics than they do addressing the real issue.

“But the worst things is that people who are victims of rape will not be believed,” Hemingway said. “That is the worst part of this story. I don’t think the writer or this magazine could have done more damage to victims of rape if they had set out to.”

Rolling Stone Magazine has lost a good

labor market jobs

Job seekers navigate through a better labor market but still teetering economy. (Photo: REUTERS)

The U.S. economy created 321,000 jobs in the month of November, easily beating the 230,000 economists expected and the biggest increase since January 2012, according to the Labor Department.

The results, which vary widely from the private sector report Wednesday conducted by independent payroll processor ADP, show a solid month of employment growth that will definitely weigh heavy on the Fed’s decision to hike interest rates.

The headline unemployment rate was unchanged at 5.8 percent and the number of unemployed persons was little changed at 9.1 million. Economists had forecast the unemployment rate would hold steady from a month earlier, the unemployment rate for adult men rose to 5.4 percent.

The number of long-term unemployed — or, those jobless for 27 weeks or more — was little changed from the month prior at 2.8 million in November. These individuals accounted for 30.7 percent of the total unemployed. Civilian labor force participation remains abysmal at 62.8 percent, a thirty-plus year low, while the employment-population ratio, which is less cited but a more important indicator, remains at a terrible 59.2 percent.

With such a vibrant month of job creation, we should have seen better gains on these two measurements, but both have remains unchanged in November. The employment-population ratio is up by just 0.6 percentage point year-over-year.

November was the tenth consecutive month in which the U.S. gained 200,000 or more jobs, but the economy must add 250,000 jobs on average monthly to keep pace with population. Fortunately, jobs created in September and October were revised upward by 44,000 jobs, and average hourly wages in November rose more than anticipated.

However, 6.9 million workers are employed part-time because they cannot find full-time work or have had their hours cut back, while 698,000 discouraged workers remained convinced there are no jobs available to them. A total of 2.1 million persons remain marginally attached to the workforce.

The November numbers were expected to be stronger-than-usual due in part to seasonal hiring for the holidays, specifically among package delivery companies such as FedEx (NYSE: FDX) and UPS (NYSE:UPS).

While labor markets appear to be strengthening — if we just look at the headline unemployment rate — the Fed says other labor market indicators suggest a slower recovery for many U.S. workers. Average hourly wages have been stagnant for months and increased by just .9 cents in November, a key factor that has kept inflation running well below the Fed’s target rate of 2 percent. Over the past year, average hourly earnings have increased by just 2 percent, nowhere near the Fed’s target.

Wages are now the key indicator for economists attempting to determine when the Fed will start raising interest rates.

The Fed says it won’t start raising rates until it reaches its dual mandate of full employment and price stability, but neither targets seem achievable in the short-term. So, they will just modify the two targets if need be. The central bank has defined the former as an unemployment rate in a range of 5.2 percent – 5.6 percent,  and the latter as an annual inflation range of 1.7 percent – 2 percent .

The unemployment rate is likely to drop into that desired range in early 2015 given the weak labor force participation rate, but the inflation target is a clear challenge. Inflation isn’t likely to move higher until wages go up significantly, and most economists say that is likely not going to happen until late 2015.

However, there is a danger to rapid wage growth — inflation. If and when wages rise too quickly, then it will lead to runaway inflation and inevitably eat up corporate and small business profits.

Wage growth and other inflationary indicators are currently — and, should be — at the heart of the growing debate within the Fed over the timing of rate hikes. The consensus among Fed economists is that hikes should and will occur in mid-2015, early enough to stave off runaway inflation, while remaining low long enough to continue providing stimulus to what is still fundamentally a very fragile economy and an even more fragile recovery.

If and when interest rates increase, which they will with or without the Fed’s control, it will raise borrowing costs for not only businesses, but for a government that just surpassed $18 trillion in total federal debt. It will make borrowing more expensive for consumers, as well, including transactions on a mortgage or a car loan. It will be extremely difficult for small businesses, too, to get a loan for expansion.

The U.S. economy created 321,000 jobs in

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