
06/08/2025
BREAKING: Trump's Interview Challenged Live on Air After Controversial Remarks About Jobs Report and 2020 Election
In a rare moment during a phone interview with CNBC's Joe Kernen, former President Donald Trump was fact-checked live over his claims regarding the recent jobs report and the 2020 election.
Trump repeated his longstanding assertion that the 2020 election was “rigged,” a claim that has been widely debunked by multiple courts, state election officials, and independent audits. Kernen pushed back, stating, “We can’t relitigate that here,” and noting that there's no verified evidence supporting the claim.
The conversation then shifted to Trump's recent removal of Dr. Erika McEntarfer, the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The firing followed the release of a disappointing jobs report, showing only 73,000 jobs added in the past month—well below expectations. The unemployment rate also rose to 4.2%, and job numbers from May and June were revised downward by a total of 258,000 jobs.
Trump suggested the data might have been politically manipulated, stating: “They gave phony numbers in order to win the election.” Kernen responded that such revisions are standard statistical practice and not uncommon.
Later, Trump claimed his poll numbers are stronger than ever, stating: “I’m at 71 percent.” Kernen clarified that this figure reflects support within the Republican base, not the broader electorate.
As discussions around jobs, elections, and economic policy intensify heading into the next election cycle, interviews like this highlight the ongoing debate between politicians, media figures, and the public over facts, narratives, and accountability.