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US Midterms 2026
17JUL

June hiring stalls as jobs turn soft

2 min read
13:49UTC

June payrolls rose just 57,000 against a 115,000 forecast, the second soft economic signal of the year and the one variable this week's court fights could not touch.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

June's weak jobs print is the fundamental now moving the midterm board while procedure stalls.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported on 3 July that June nonfarm payrolls rose just 57,000, roughly half the 115,000 economists had expected. The BLS also revised April and May down by a combined 74,000. Unemployment held at 4.2%, but only because labour-force participation fell to 61.5%, its lowest since March 2021.

A flat jobless rate propped up by people leaving the workforce is weaker than the headline reads, because it counts discouraged job-seekers as no longer unemployed. Hiring at this pace, with participation sliding, describes a labour market losing momentum. This is the second soft reading after the first-quarter contraction in gross domestic product of 0.3%.

The figure feeds the generic-ballot environment that Silver Bulletin marked at D+6 , the kind of margin that in past midterms has cost the party in power 15 to 25 House seats. Every institutional fight this week re-ran a question the courts had settled in June. The economy moved the one number procedure cannot reach, and it moved against the incumbent party.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Every month the government reports how many new jobs were created and what share of people are unemployed. In June, only 57,000 jobs were added, far below the 115,000 economists expected. Normally that would push the unemployment rate up, but it stayed at 4.2% because fewer people were actively looking for work, the lowest share since March 2021. Fewer job-seekers can make the unemployment rate look steady even when hiring is genuinely slowing down.

First Reported In

Update #12 · Voter-data drive stalls; jobs turn soft

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics· 9 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
Different Perspectives
Non-US foreign-policy commentary (Jerusalem Post)
Non-US foreign-policy commentary (Jerusalem Post)
Jerusalem Post coverage frames Graham's death chiefly as a foreign-policy loss, citing his role as the Senate's most vocal advocate for Ukraine and Russia sanctions and Israel-related security votes, distinct from Washington's floor-arithmetic framing. That reporting adds that South Carolina has not elected a Democrat to the Senate since 1998, so control of the seat itself was never genuinely contested.
Election-law and voting-rights critics
Election-law and voting-rights critics
Election-law critics point to South Carolina's own arithmetic: the federal 45-day overseas-ballot deadline for the 11 August primary fell on 27 June, a fortnight before Graham died, and Section 7-11-55 contains no voter-eligibility language despite grounding the June-primary voter bar. They read both as design gaps a state can exploit through inaction, not through any single deliberate violation.
South Carolina State Election Commission
South Carolina State Election Commission
Commission director Conway Belangia declared the eligibility review "completed" on 16 July, barring anyone who voted in June's Democratic primary from the 11 August Republican primary, citing only "the requirements of South Carolina election law". The commission is standing behind that ruling and its filing-to-runoff calendar without naming the statute either rests on.
Senate Democratic opposition
Senate Democratic opposition
Senate Democrats have not cast a floor vote against the House Budget Committee's 20-14 resolution yet, but their standing objection, that documentary-proof-of-citizenship rules burden voters who lack ready access to those documents, applies directly to the $10bn grant structure it just advanced. They are counting on the Byrd Rule to do what floor votes could not.
Senate Republican leadership
Senate Republican leadership
Majority Leader John Thune moved within two days of Graham's death to install Ron Johnson as Budget chair, whose office says he is "prepared to serve", though no conference vote has confirmed it. Leadership pushed the FY2027 resolution through committee 20-14 on 16 July, treating the vacancy as a gap to close, not a reason to pause the SAVE Act.
Labour-market economists
Labour-market economists
Economists note June payrolls rose just 57,000, about half the forecast 115,000, with April and May revised down further. They call it the only development this week bearing directly on how incumbents can run on the economy in November.