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Archive June 6, 2025

US economy adds 139,000 jobs as growth slows

Employers in the United States have slowed hiring even though they added a solid 139,000 jobs in May.

While that was higher than the forecast of 133,000 jobs, it was lower than the 147,000 hires in April,  Labor Department data released on Friday showed. It also sharply revised downward the data for March and April by 95,000 jobs.

The US Labor Department said the biggest gains were in the healthcare industry which added 62,000 jobs; followed by the leisure and hospitality sector which added 48,000, 30,000 of which were in food services.

The social services sector followed suit, adding about 16,000 jobs. The federal government contracted 22,000 jobs.

Industries including manufacturing, wholesale trade, retail trade, transportation and warehousing showed little change as tariff anticipation spending slowed.

The unemployment rate held steady at 4.2 percent. Wages ticked up slightly. The average wage grew by 15 cents or 0.4 percent.

“The job market is steadily but surely throttling back. Monthly job gains are moderating, and most telling, the gains are being consistently revised lower, and not by a little bit. Indeed, after revision, monthly job gains appear to be closing in on 100,000,” Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, told Al Jazeera.

“It [the jobs report] does signal the job market and economy are increasingly fragile as the fallout from the global trade war intensifies.”

Private payrolls also tumbled this month, according to payroll firm ADP in a report on Wednesday, which showed the US economy added only 37,000 jobs, the lowest in two years. Unlike the Labor Department report which lags by a few weeks, this report is more immediate.

“After a strong start to the year, hiring is losing momentum,” Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP, said in a release.

What was particularly notable about the ADP report was the set of industries with net job losses. The manufacturing sector recorded a net loss of 3,000. Natural resources and the mining industry lost 5,000. Those losses in the goods-producing sectors were offset by a job gain of 6,000 in construction.

The only substantive gains were in the leisure and hospitality sector, a notoriously low-paying sector, which added 38,000, according to ADP. Financial services followed in the gains, adding 18,000 jobs. However, those gains were offset by losses, including in education and health, which cut 13,000 jobs. The trade and transportation and utilities sector cut 4,000 jobs.

Last month, the ADP report showed 62,000 jobs were added, in stark contrast to the Labor Department’s 147,000, because it is considered a more immediate measure.

Job openings and labour turnover 

On Tuesday, the job openings and labour turnover survey or JOLTS report, which captures data at a significant lag to the Labor Department and ADP, showed there were 7.4 million open jobs in April, up roughly 191,000 from the month before.

But just because jobs are open does not mean they are being filled, according to Elise Gould, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute.

“I think that reflects some cautiousness on the part of both employers and workers,” Gould told Al Jazeera.

While job openings in sectors like trade, transportation and utilities increased, hiring actually decreased.

This comes as major employers have implemented hiring slowdowns and freezes across sectors.

American Airlines reportedly put in place a hiring freeze for flight attendants in April amid uncertainty in the travel market. The financial services company T Rowe Price slowed down its hiring. And amid a slowdown in research grants, universities have put in place hiring freezes, most recently Johns Hopkins University, which currently has 600 National Institutes of Health-funded medical research projects under way.

As Al Jazeera has previously reported, small businesses said because of the looming tariffs, they’ve had to implement hiring freezes.

Hiring for small businesses declined in May by 4.4 percent compared with this time last year, according to Homebase, a payroll service provider for more than 150,000 small businesses accounting for roughly 3.8 million workers.

To forecast what to expect in the jobs market moving forward, EPI’s Gould suggests a close watch on key indicators including housing starts and factory orders, which indicate that manufacturers and construction companies will need to cut jobs if trends continue.

“Some of the government data [like the jobs and JOLTS report] takes a lot longer to sort of see trouble to catch that turning point and you might see it in the other measures a little bit faster, but there’s also a lot of volatility in them,” Gould said.

Adolescence’s Stephen Graham reveals he had ‘scary’ emergency op on plane

The actor and father of two experienced an unsettling health dilemma mid-flight to America, which resulted in an emergency operation on the plane

His operation took place mid-air while on the way to the US(Image: Youtube/Late Night with Seth Meyers)

Stephen Graham has opened up about the “scary” emergency operation he underwent while on a plane.

Appearing on Late Night with Seth Meyers, the Adolescence actor spoke of a medical emergency that took place the last time he touched down in the States. After the host asked about his previous traumatic flight, Stephen responded by saying it was “a hell of an experience”.

He elaborated: “Look, I’m of a certain age, you know what I mean? You’re a gentleman, like myself. I don’t know, once you get over like 45, you tend to go to the toilet quite a lot of times”. His storytelling made the crowd laugh and had viewers wondering where this story was going exactly.

Graham went on to explain how many people opt to have a catheter fitted, which is something he himself had opted for. Ultimately, it was supposed to aid him in his bathroom habits, and he explained that after “three to four months”, you should be experiencing “fewer trips to the toilet”.

Stephen Graham as Eddie Miller, Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller, in Adolescence.
Stephen recently starred in the hit Netflix show Adolescence (Image: Courtesy of Netflix)

Although the Netflix star found himself in a bit of an unusual situation on a flight 10, 000 feet in the air when everything had been fine, right up until that point. He tells the late-night host about drinking water on the flight as usual, going to the toilet and suddenly not being able to pee.

Article continues below

“I’m like, Oh, this doesn’t feel right”, he told Myers. “I knew I had to, and then silly Stephen thought, ‘ Oh, well, if I go back to my seat and I just keep drinking water, at some point it will happen. ‘” After going back to his seat and some time passing, he went back to the toilet and was shocked by what happened next.

Graham said: “long story short, all of a sudden I went, but it was just pure blood”, adding that it was “very scary”. He further explained that he couldn’t stop the sheer amount of blood and began to have a “slight panic attack”.

He admitted that the entire situation had made him quite emotional, but luck was on his side, as he remembers taking a selfie with a fan before the flight, who just happened to be a doctor.

Adolescence's Stephen Graham reveals he had scary emergency op on airplane
He met the doctor before the flight, and remembered him (Image: Youtube/Late Night with Seth Meyers)

“He had another friend with him, who was a surgeon”, the actor explained. “So I’m there, and I explain. He’s like, ‘ Ok, ‘ and the surgeon, Dr Haji, says, ‘ We can work this out. ‘” The entire area he was in was sterilised, and a catheter was pulled out of an emergency box.

To put it bluntly, Graham said: “I drop my kecks, I get on the couch, and he performs a catheter operation there and then”. And, once it was over and done with, the adolescence star took a selfie with the doctors and crew on board to remember the moment.

Article continues below

Adolescence’s Stephen Graham reveals he had ‘scary’ emergency op on plane

The actor and father of two experienced an unsettling health dilemma mid-flight to America, which resulted in an emergency operation on the plane

His operation took place mid-air while on the way to the US(Image: Youtube/Late Night with Seth Meyers)

Stephen Graham has opened up about the “scary” emergency operation he underwent while on a plane.

Appearing on Late Night with Seth Meyers, the Adolescence actor spoke of a medical emergency that took place the last time he touched down in the States. After the host asked about his previous traumatic flight, Stephen responded by saying it was “a hell of an experience”.

He elaborated: “Look, I’m of a certain age, you know what I mean? You’re a gentleman, like myself. I don’t know, once you get over like 45, you tend to go to the toilet quite a lot of times”. His storytelling made the crowd laugh and had viewers wondering where this story was going exactly.

Graham went on to explain how many people opt to have a catheter fitted, which is something he himself had opted for. Ultimately, it was supposed to aid him in his bathroom habits, and he explained that after “three to four months”, you should be experiencing “fewer trips to the toilet”.

Stephen Graham as Eddie Miller, Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller, in Adolescence.
Stephen recently starred in the hit Netflix show Adolescence (Image: Courtesy of Netflix)

Although the Netflix star found himself in a bit of an unusual situation on a flight 10, 000 feet in the air when everything had been fine, right up until that point. He tells the late-night host about drinking water on the flight as usual, going to the toilet and suddenly not being able to pee.

Article continues below

“I’m like, Oh, this doesn’t feel right”, he told Myers. “I knew I had to, and then silly Stephen thought, ‘ Oh, well, if I go back to my seat and I just keep drinking water, at some point it will happen. ‘” After going back to his seat and some time passing, he went back to the toilet and was shocked by what happened next.

Graham said: “long story short, all of a sudden I went, but it was just pure blood”, adding that it was “very scary”. He further explained that he couldn’t stop the sheer amount of blood and began to have a “slight panic attack”.

He admitted that the entire situation had made him quite emotional, but luck was on his side, as he remembers taking a selfie with a fan before the flight, who just happened to be a doctor.

Adolescence's Stephen Graham reveals he had scary emergency op on airplane
He met the doctor before the flight, and remembered him (Image: Youtube/Late Night with Seth Meyers)

“He had another friend with him, who was a surgeon”, the actor explained. “So I’m there, and I explain. He’s like, ‘ Ok, ‘ and the surgeon, Dr Haji, says, ‘ We can work this out. ‘” The entire area he was in was sterilised, and a catheter was pulled out of an emergency box.

To put it bluntly, Graham said: “I drop my kecks, I get on the couch, and he performs a catheter operation there and then”. And, once it was over and done with, the adolescence star took a selfie with the doctors and crew on board to remember the moment.

Article continues below

Britain’s Hewett reaches wheelchair singles final

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French Open 2025

Dates: 25 May-8 June Venue: Roland Garros

Great Britain’s Alfie Hewett beat Gustavo Fernandez 4-6 6-4 6-7 (12-10) to reach the French Open wheelchair singles final.

Second seed Hewett had not dropped a set in his first two matches but had to come from behind to get beyond Argentina’s Fernandez in two hours and 46 minutes.

Hewett is a 10-time Grand Slam singles champion and has won the French Open title three times.

The 27-year-old faces world number one Tokito Oda in the final after the Japanese star beat Martin de la Puente 6-4 6-4.

Hewett was also due to play alongside fellow Briton Gordon Reid in the men’s wheelchair doubles final on Friday but that match has been moved to Saturday.

Related topics

  • Tennis
  • Disability Sport

Buhari Pays Respect To Late Justice Uwais

Following the passing of former Nigerian Chief Justice, Justice Mohammed Lawal Uwais, former President Muhammadu Buhari has expressed condolences to Nigerians.

The former president expressed grief over the passing of the late CJN, who “had a distinguished career as a lawyer and judge,” in a statement released by his spokesperson, Garba Shaehu on Friday.

He continued, noting that he had a significant impact on bringing justice to the people as the head of the country’s judiciary.

Also read: Former CJN Mohammed Uwais passes away at 89.

He was praised for his compassion and justice, he claimed. He significantly improved the democratic foundation of Nigeria. In his capacity as a judge and member of the Council of States, he will always be remembered by countless people for his dedication to a thorough understanding of the law.

I send my sincere condolences to his family, friends, and relatives who are all grieving his loss.

According to his family, the retired jurist passed away in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, on June 6, 2025.

Alcaraz on course for French Open defence as Musetti retires injured

Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz secured a return to the French Open final after an early scare from eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti, who was eventually forced to retire with injury.

Italian Musetti took the first set 6-4, before Alcaraz fought back to take the next two sets 7-6(3) 6-0 and lead 2-0 in the fourth before his opponent’s leg injury took hold on Friday.

The Spaniard, who is attempting to become only the third man to retain his Roland Garros title this century after Rafa Nadal and Gustavo Kuerten, will face either world number one Jannik Sinner or 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic in Sunday’s final.

“It’s never great to go through like this,” Alcaraz said, before hailing Musetti’s achievement of reaching at least the semifinals of all four elite claycourt events this year.

“He’s a great player, he has had an incredible claycourt season … I wish him a speedy recovery and I’m sure we’ll be enjoying his tennis pretty soon.”

Musetti twice denied Alcaraz the chance to break in the opening nine games before the 23-year-old suddenly dialled up the intensity and snatched the opening set when his Spanish opponent produced errors in a poor service game.

Alcaraz of Spain returns a shot during his match against Musetti of Italy on day 13 at Roland Garros [Susan Mullane-Imagn Images/Reuters]

A frustrated Alcaraz kicked his bench during the second set but finally found a way through Musetti’s dogged defence to draw level after a tiebreak and then produced a dazzling display of power and precision to dish out a bagel in the third set.

Musetti, who appeared to be hampered by a left thigh issue midway through the third set, threw in the towel after two games in the fourth.

“The first two sets were tough. I had chances to be up in the match, but couldn’t make the most of them,” Alcaraz added.

“When I won the second set, I was relieved, and I knew that I needed to be aggressive and be myself. I was calmer. I could see clearer and I could play great tennis at the start of the third.

“I’m feeling great physically. It’s been three intense weeks, but I have one more step to take. I’m playing great tennis and I have great confidence. I’ve been doing great things in this tournament, and now is the time to give 100 percent in the final.”

Alcaraz said he would tune into the second semifinal on Court Philippe Chatrier to study his potential opponents.

“I’m not going to miss tonight’s match, it’s one of the best we can have right now, Sinner against Djokovic,” he said.