A Zynga worker puts up a job sign at Zynga headquarters in San Francisco, Thursday, June 2, 2011. Professional and business services added 44,000 positions, most of them in accounting, information technology services, and management. Employers in May added the fewest jobs in eight months, and the unemployment rate inched up to 9.1 percent. Zynga makes online games.
Paul Sakuma, Associated Press
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama cannot escape one giant vulnerability as he bids to keep his job: Millions of voters still don't have one.
Suddenly, the snapshot of the American economy is depressing again.
Job creation is down. So is consumer confidence. And homes sales, auto sales, construction spending, manufacturing expansion.
The brutal month of May was a reminder of the economy's fragility and the risks for an incumbent president.
Nothing that Obama oversees, not even a success as dramatic as finding and killing Osama bin Laden, will matter as much as his handling of the economy. It is the dominant driver of voter behavior. People hold their president accountable if they can't find work in the richest country in the world.
The weakening recovery is testing the entire foundation of Obama's optimistic economic message, that the nation is getting stronger all the time. As much as the White House says it never dwells on any single jobs report, and Obama never even mentioned the troubling one released Friday, the stakes get higher by the month.
A finally forming field of Republican presidential competitors is maneuvering into the space for the public's attention with this message: Obama has failed.
Election Day 2012 is 17 months away, and Obama's campaign knows incremental job growth won't do. The unemployment rate is 9.1 percent. If it stays anywhere near there, Obama will face re-election with a higher jobless rate than any other post-war president.
In his favor, Obama still has the loudest voice to sell his message that the longer term trends, including job growth every month, are good.
Nearly halfway through a year dominated by foreign events mostly outside his control, he plans to build his next few months around economic events.
So what comes next will be a summer when both sides select the economic facts that best suit their case. It will play against a backdrop of trying to cut a massive deficit while letting the nation borrow more so it doesn't default.
As Obama pushes his economic agenda, his re-election chances bank on more than job growth. They also depend on how well he can remind people that he inherited a recession and that compared with the early days of 2009, the country is in a better place.
"This economy took a big hit," Obama said Friday in Ohio, a pivotal 2012 state. "You know, it's just like if you had a bad illness, if you got hit by a truck, it's going to take a while for you to mend. And that's what's happened to our economy. It's taking a while to mend."
Is progress enough to convince people that he deserves a second term?
If so, he can't afford many setbacks like the new jobs report. Employers in May added just 54,000 jobs, the fewest in eight months. Almost 14 million people are jobless. Analysts suggested the economy could improve this year, but the recovery could be weak for months.
"There are always going to be bumps on the road to recovery," Obama said.
The Republicans hoping to unseat him pounced.
—Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney: "President Obama has failed to pull us out of this economic downturn.
—Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty: "Obama's failure to address the tough challenges" is clear.
—Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich: "The administration's policies are failing."
Obama's political tendency is to take the longer view. An Associated Press-GfK poll less than a month ago, for example, showed rising public optimism about the economy and his stewardship.
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When will people get a clue with this president. He is not about jobs, he's about fundamentally transforming America and the world. His buddies like Soros and Ayers have helped mentor this guy in the ways of socialism and redistribution. Break the More..
The country is healing, albeit slowly, thanks to Obama. What do the Republicans have to offer but tax cuts and deregulation and gutting Medicare? They haven't put up one jobs bill since they took the House last year. Of course they have nothing to More..
The country is healing???????? That is the biggest joke I have ever heard. Obama has turned out to be the Great Divider and the Great Condescendor. He is the worst president since Herbert Hoover.