YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Critics: Bureau of Labor Statistics nominee linked to left-wing groups

    The president’s nominee to run the highly visible Bureau of Labor Statistics is likely to win Senate approval despite her ties to decidedly left-wing political groups, her critics say.

    Erica Groshen’s left-wing ties include her 1998 co-authorship of an article urging an end to small businesses’ exemption from expensive federal regulations, and her husband’s 2011 donation to the far-left Working Families Party.

    “The integrity of the Bureau of Labor Statistics lies entirely in the belief that the data they present is not skewed by political opinion,” said Rick Manning, communications director at Americans for Limited Government.

    But no Republican senator has put a hold on her nomination to be the agency’s next commissioner, despite the fact that monthly job announcements from the BLS are already attracting massive media attention in an election year marked by record unemployment.

    Unless a GOP senator puts a hold on her nomination, she’s on track to be confirmed by the Democrat-controlled Senate before the end of the year.

    Groshen co-authored her 1998 article, in which she argued against regulatory exemptions for small firms, for the union-backed Economic Policy Institute. That organization’s chief economist at the time, Jared Bernstein, later served as Chief Economist and Economic Adviser to Vice President Joe Biden.

    “Large firms are doing well by employees, and themselves, by providing jobs with higher wages and benefits and greater job security,” read the article. “[P]ublic policy, rather than favoring small business by exempting it from many forms of regulation, should strive to be size neutral.”

    The article was titled “Small consolation: The dubious benefits of small business for job growth and wages.”

    Groshen’s husband, Christopher W. Bazinet, is an university-based genetics researcher in New York. In May 2011, he contributed a small amount, $20, to the far left, New York-based Working Families Party.

    The party’s platform calls for steady increases in New York’s minimum wage, and urges recognition and legal benefits for illegal immigrants.

    “The Working Families Party believes, despite occasional frictions, that the economic interests of native-born and immigrant workers are fundamentally the same,” the party’s website reads.

    Many free-market economists argue that minimum wage hikes increase unemployment among lower-skilled U.S. workers, as employers are forced to shrink their payrolls to cover higher labor costs. Easier immigration rules also provide cheaper services to well-off professionals, as well as election-day support for government unions and Democratic candidates.

    If Groshen gets the job, Manning said, she’ll be in a position to spin the BLS reports for four years, including the last few months before the 2012 election and even through a possible first term for Mitt Romney.

    Each month, the jobs reports are presented to a sequestered panel of reporters 30 minutes before their official release. The reporters have little time to prepare their reports, Manning explained, making them vulnerable to any skew BLS may put on the data.

    The reporters’ follow-up reports are more in-depth but can’t break the impression set by the first bulletins, he said. “Reporters [initially] don’t have time to dig deep into the data, so that’s the impression that comes out,” he said.

    “If she imposes her perspective on the data releases and how they’re presented to the media, she will be doing a great disservice to the country and to the professionals who work so hard at the BLS,” Manning said.
     But Groshen’s chances have improved with support from other economists, including free-market specialists affiliated with the GOP.

    “She’s a left-wing economist … but her public record is excellent — she hasn’t written anything weird,” said Diana Furchtgott-Roth, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

    “She’s a very, very good economist and I don’t think there’s anything wrong with her,” Furchtgott-Roth said, adding that “no-one could be more Republican than I am.”

    She also contended that no BLS commissioner could, by herself, skew the agency’s research or products. The BLS is “a vast bureaucracy with one person at the helm. … It’s just very difficult to change that vast group of technocrats,” she said.

    Groshen could only have a minor impact on how monthly unemployment numbers are presented to the the public, Furchtgott-Roth alleged, adding that even that impact would be curbed by extensive rules that govern the language used in BLS monthly jobs reports.

    Manning, however, wasn’t persuaded. “To place at the head of the bureau someone with a far-left record,” he told The Daily Caller, “has the potential to diminish the believability of the information that they produce.”

    Follow Neil on Twitter
    Join the conversation on The Daily Caller

    Read more stories from The Daily Caller

    Critics: Bureau of Labor Statistics nominee linked to left-wing groups

    Let's celebrate Flag Day with hot American women [SLIDESHOW]

    MILTON WOLF: The Chevy Volt is a 'shocking' story

    Gowdy willing to meet Holder on Fast and Furious, but still wants documents

    More attention will save Obama!

    Who made the dumbest statement this week?

    Loading...
    Poll Choice Options
    • Man charged with tossing wife off cruise ship

      SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A California grand jury has indicted a Florida man on charges he strangled his ex-wife and tossed her off a cruise ship in Italy.

    • Bieber behind wheel as car hits man in Hollywood

      LOS ANGELES (AP) — Video shows Justin Bieber running into a photographer with his white Ferrari in Hollywood, but police say there was no crime and the injuries aren't life-threatening.

    • Kim and Kanye's Baby Name Is Not That Strange

      It's being reported that rapper Kanye West and his reality star girlfriend Kim Kardashian have named their brand-new baby, born this weekend, Kaidence Donda West. Donda was Kanye's late mother's name, so that makes sense, but, um, Kaidence? What's going on with Kaidence?

    • Optimism fading, Brazil protests put leaders on alert

      By Paulo Prada RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - When more than 200,000 protesters took to the streets across Brazil on Monday night, they demanded a dizzying array of improvements - from halting the fast rise of prices to cleaning up government corruption. If one message stood out, it was that Brazilians are no longer willing to accept the rosy outlook that politicians in Latin America's biggest country have been painting for years. Until recently, Brazil was one of the world's most envied economies. ...

    • 3 charged with enslaving disabled Ohio mom, child

      ASHLAND, Ohio (AP) — A mentally disabled woman charged with shoplifting a candy bar asked to be jailed because three people "had been mean to her" — then went on to tell authorities about her time spent in unfathomably cruel servitude, along with her young daughter, at the hands of three people, authorities said Tuesday.

    • 3 charged in Ohio with enslaving mother, daughter

      CLEVELAND (AP) — Three Ohioans are accused of enslaving a mentally disabled young mother and her daughter over two years.

    • Police: Paraplegic castrated at Philly facility

      PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A 41-year-old man is being held on $5 million bail after police say he castrated a paraplegic during a dispute at an assisted living facility in Philadelphia.

    • Mortgage applications tumble as rates rise further: MBA

      NEW YORK (Reuters) - Interest rates on home mortgages rose last week to hit their highest level in over a year, sapping demand from potential homeowners, data from an industry group showed on Wednesday. Rates climbed 2 basis points to average 4.17 in the week ended June 14, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. It was the highest level since March of last year. After hovering around record lows, rates have surged for six weeks in a row, pushed higher by worries that the Federal Reserve could slow its stimulus program sooner than had been expected. ...

    Follow Yahoo! News