from politics to netflix s potential tactic to crack down on past words. we are going to break down the biggest news of the week as the 11th hour gets underway right now. good evening once again, i m stephanie ruhle i can t even get my name out. maybe because i m excited to share the fantastic jobs report that we heard about this morning the u.s. economy added more than half 1 million jobs in the month of january, bringing the unemployment rate down to its lowest point since 1969. and taking a whole lot of experts by complete surprise. numbers will be coming out shortly, we re expecting one 88 to 200,000. wow, wow! whoever took over, congratulations. 500 in 17,000. 517,000. non farmed pay roles, a blast off of a number it came as no surprise that president biden pointed to the jobs report as evidence that his economic strategy is working. president then took that energy to philadelphia where he and vice president harris spent the day talking about their administration s acc
about balloons in your entire life? now! yeah. i m a big balloon in those, yes i will frequently send people bouquets a balloons, because a leveller, but i do not think i would be talking this much about balloons on primetime television. well your fatten for the top i came across! so i appreciate that. i know more about balloons than i did an hour ago. [laughter] thank you very much. alex see an. expect you to rally. all right, remember when we said that corporations are people? yeah, no! you know who our people? people are people! workers are people! people who need jobs to pay rent, to buy food, to get diapers. and tonight, three years after commit a nosedive, that people are able to find jobs to do all those things again. here s today s blockbuster jobs report for january: 517,000 net new jobs were created. i ve been in the business for a long time. i ve covered the economy. that s a lot of jobs! that s nearly triple the number of drives that economists p
i did an hour ago. [laughter] thank you very much alex, see you next week. you too, ali. all right, remember when we said that corporations are people? yeah, no! you know who our people? people are people! workers are people! people who need jobs to pay rent, to buy food, to get diapers. and tonight, three years after commit a nosedive, that people are able to find jobs to do all those things again. here s today s blockbuster jobs report for january: 517,000 net new jobs were created. i ve been in the business for a long time. i ve covered the economy. that s a lot of jobs! that s nearly triple the number of drives that economists protected and it far outpaces the average monthly job growth through a solid 2022. on top of that, the borough of labor cities is part of the department of labor, they really stated today that show the job growth for nearly every month in the past year was stronger than originally estimated meeting hundreds of thousands more jobs were create
stop that led to the beating and a few days later the death of tyre nichols. want to renew the video that is graphic but seeing it is the only way to understand the brutality of this attack that began seemingly the moment that nichols was stopped. [inaudible] [inaudible] so after nichols fled, a group of officers that caught up with him and then they beat him. you see it here, mercilessly. and in the, and all he could do what cry out for his mother. [inaudible] this is yet another incident that shows some of those that are paid to protect and serve instead of out of control and violent. and it has many across the country saying enough. enough. five police officers, it doesn t matter, not even one of them to say no this is not right. there is no words to describe it. i was sick to my stomach, i had to walk away a few times you know? it just breaks your heart. we have to stand up and be reminded that this is not just a memphis thing or a sacramento or california thing, it
that protection goes away if a president uses words that are quote an incitement of imminent private violence. as a reminder, here is just some of what former president donald j trump said on that fateful day. we re gonna walk down to the capitol [applause] and we re going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women, and we re probably not gonna be cheering much for some of them. because you ll never take back our country with weakness. we fight like hell, and if you don t fight like hell, you re not gonna have a country anymore. what congresswoman, who is part of this lawsuit against donald trump, of course welcome the doj s decision today, and earlier she described what happened in the house when the capital was under siege. we had to try to put on our gas max and we were told we had to hit the floor we barely got out of the chambers before they came in. we almost did not get out of there. after january six, the officers on the front lines of the attack t