Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy’s upcoming Alaska Sustainable Energy Conference brings together subject matter experts and policymakers to engage in robust
right, kayleigh, no matter how much this administration tries to sugarcoat this, the reality as it is horrible for the american worker in the american consumer. 2.7 in the last year, average weekly earnings fell $4.26 in march alone. get this, since biden took office those wages have fallen $18. $18. and this is why americans are fired up. as their wages are following is the value of their dollars plummet, the cost of goods and services is skyrocketing. democrats keep referencing the average worker as the reason why they are proposing increased federal spending. but that s exactly the reason why the average american worker isn t so much pain. they are the ones doing it. you cannot explain it away as the wall street journal writes in an op-ed. come ballot time in november, putin is not on the ballot, the
in december. that beat out estimates. maybe job numbers are contributing to america s spending mood. we can celebrate the robust increase in payrolls over the past year. 4.26% payroll growth since january. trump inherited the longest payroll expansion in modern times and he hit 1.37% for his first year in office. in fairness, biden did inherit a poorly performing covid economy from trump. so many of his numbers are going to look very strong initially. coming up, trump has gone almost a year. yet democracy is still in peril. some argue it may be in worse shape than while he was in office. we will discuss that next. office we will discuss that next. for driving safe and driving less. okay, what message did you hear this time? safe drivers can save using snapshot? -what s snapshot? -what the commercial was about. -i tune commercials out. -me too. they re always like blah, blah blah. tell me about it. i m going to a silent retreat next weekend. my niece got kicked out of one of those.
the weekly community lunch. in short, she helps keep the residents going. this includes all the blankets and the warm weather clothing. and now she is trying to keep everybody warm. what are you hearing in terms of in particular energy bills? some of them have doubled, trebled and a lot of people here have prepayment metres and you put the money in and people are running out of electricity before the end of the week. they normally have their allocation, you get your money and put it on, and suddenly it s running out three days early and they ve got nowhere to go to get the extra money. sometimes if you give them food, there s no point, they haven t got anything to heat it on and if they have, they haven t got the power to do it. which bill is this? on the other side of london, in beckton, is rebecca. £124.26. quite expensive. and that is for the 2nd of december to the 28th of december? yeah, so not even a month.
the s&p 500 lost one and a quarter. the nasdaq was down two and three quarters. take a look at gasoline prices. jumping 11 cents a gallon overnight. one month ago the average price was $3.42. a week ago 3.57. yesterday 373 and today s price 3.84. for diesel, 3.77 a month ago. 3.98 a week ago. 4.12 yesterday and 4.26 today. president biden says the economy rolled back faster than expected. celebrating the february jobs report but there is tremendous strain on the economy and american families on higher prices particularly as you just saw from gasoline. white house correspondent jackie mine rick joins us tonight with how that factors in to the ukraine crisis live from the north lawn. good evening, jacqui. good evening to you, bret. just when the grip of the pandemic seems to loosens the war s threat to the economy is growing by the day.