There are rules about when you can share certain pieces of information, and Senator Elizabeth Warren thinks President Trump just broke a big one. The Massachusetts Democrat slammed Trump for leaking December's U.S. employment data hours before it was supposed to see the light of day, calling it a transparent move to shift attention away from economic problems.
Breaking the Jobs Report Embargo
Here's what happened: Trump posted charts on Truth Social featuring Bureau of Labor Statistics data from the December jobs report a full 12 hours before the official release. The charts showed that private-sector job creation hit 654,000 in early 2025, while government employment dropped by 181,000—cuts Trump attributed to the Department of Government Efficiency, the cost-cutting operation run by Tesla Inc. (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk.
In a post on X Sunday, Warren argued that Trump's decision to leak "market-sensitive data" was nothing more than an attempt to distract voters from his "failing economy."
Why This Matters
The BLS employment report isn't just another government statistic. Investors, policymakers, and businesses watch it obsessively because it has the power to move stock, bond, and currency markets in significant ways. That's why there's a strict embargo protocol governing who gets to see the data and when.
Under established rules, the data goes to the President through the Council of Economic Advisers the evening before release, and to the Secretary of Labor about 30 minutes beforehand. But it stays under strict embargo until the official release time. Sharing it early could give certain market participants an unfair advantage—exactly the kind of thing the embargo is designed to prevent.




