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Todayâs Agenda
- [Pelosi is handling]( impeachment [better than Trump]( â [for now](.
- The [factory sector is the dark cloud]( in a sunny jobs report.
- A [trade truce wonât be enough]( to fix what ails the global economy.
- The [â50s werenât that great](, actually.
Impeachment Analyst Ratings: Hold Pelosi, Sell Trump
Neither Nancy Pelosi nor Donald Trump really wanted an impeachment battle. But now that itâs here, one of them is handling it better than the other.Â
Pelosi, the House Speaker, was reluctant to impeach Trump and risk political backlash that could hurt vulnerable Democrats and cost her the House majority. She didnât budge until the Ukraine affairâs evidence suggested such obviously impeachable behavior that it became unavoidable. Many Dems had accused her of moving too slowly, but when she did move, she very quickly got wavering members and much of the country on board. This cautious approach culminated in yesterdayâs House vote formalizing the process. [The roll call wasnât necessary, but it was smart](, Bloombergâs editorial board writes: It nullified Republicansâ process objections and ensured fair hearings designed to inform rather than subject the country to the tiresome political grandstanding that typically dominates such affairs.
It [gets a lot trickier for Pelosi and the Dems]( from here on out, though, writes Jonathan Bernstein. Theyâve dominated the news cycle since the Ukraine mess broke, but that may just mean their luckâs about to run out. Theyâve also got to decide how quickly to move and how much stuff they can toss onto the Big Old Cart Oâ Impeachment before its wheels fall off and the public loses patience and interest.
Still, they start out in a much better place than their target. As Tim OâBrien writes, [the president still has not mounted an effective defense]( and appears to have no strategy, aside from taking Jared Kushnerâs advice to just ride things out. Trumpâs go-to style of âchaos, mismanagement and serial buffoonery,â as Tim calls it, has saved him before, but this is the most serious thing heâs ever faced.Â
Bonus Impeachment Reading: In trashing Alexander Vindmanâs background, Trumpâs defenders ignore the [tradition of Jewish émigrés fleeing mistreatment]( in their home countries. â Andrew RosenthalÂ
You Want Fries With That Job?
Seldom are monthly payroll gains of 128,000 called âblowoutâ jobs numbers, but you can excuse Trump for describing Octoberâs [report]( that way. It topped expectations, and Septemberâs number got a big upgrade. Still, beneath the hood, several trends are not Trumpâs friends, warns Robert Burgess. [Manufacturing hiring stubbornly continues to not be great](, echoing another grim factory-sector [readout]( from the Institute for Supply Management today. Most worrisome for Trumpâs 2020 election chances, factory hiring is slowing down in big states he won in 2016:
Meanwhile, hiring in restaurants and bars is going like gangbusters, and [food-service employment may soon eclipse that of manufacturing](, writes Justin Fox. For why this is maybe not such a great trend, you might want to compare the typical paychecks in each industry.
End, the Trade Wars Must
Still, the short-term economic news was good for Trump today, between the jobs headlines and happy talk from China about trade, all of which [boosted]( stocks to new all-time highs. China matters because [trade tensions are still the biggest problem]( for U.S. manufacturing and the rest of the global economy, as WTO director-general Roberto Azevedo writes. But a (still-iffy) short-term U.S.-China truce wonât offset the damage already done. Even rolling the clock back two years to the time before Trump started this fight will still leave a badly fractured, uncertain world.
That uncertainty shows up in all kinds of unexpected ways. Online home-goods retailer Wayfair Inc. is a perfect micro-example of this, writes Sarah Halzack. Trade-war [tariffs raised prices on much of Wayfairâs stuff](, which made consumers think twice about buying said stuff. Such effects pop up throughout the economy, raising questions about just how much consumer spending can really offset a factory slowdown.
Telltale Charts
A lot of Americans feel hazy nostalgia for the 1950s, which should baffle the many, many Americans for whom [the 1950s were actually pretty terrible](, writes Noah Smith.Â
Big Oilâs latest quarterly results should [make it tempting for Saudi Aramco]( to come to market, writes Liam Denning. Itâs got a more compelling story for todayâs oil investors.
Further Reading
Misguided [energy subsidies are a common thread in unrest]( throughout Latin America. Artificially cheap fuel creates all sorts of problems, including the problem of taking it away. â Bloombergâs editorial board
Nigel [Farage could complicate Boris Johnsonâs dreams]( of election victory. â Therese RaphaelÂ
National security officials wonder if [Turkey knew where Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was hiding]( all along. â Eli LakeÂ
Itâs [too late for the U.S. to stop the Nord Stream 2]( pipeline sending Russian gas to Europe. â Leonid BershidskyÂ
Googleâs Fitbit purchase is the latest sign it still has [no clue what the future of computing]( will look like. â Shira Ovide Â
SoftBankâs Vision Fund has [a silo problem](. â Matt Levine
ICYMI
Elizabeth Warren rolled out her own [Medicare for All plan](. (See also: [Warrenâs $30 Trillion Health Problem]( by Max Nisen on Oct. 18)
Saudi Aramco [pays surprisingly little](.
âBaby Sharkâ has made a [Korean family kajillionaires](.
Kickers
A third of Americans [battle burnout weekly](.
Deep sleep may help [clear Alzheimerâs toxins](.
The science behind [Jackson Pollockâs painting technique](.
Every [Martin Scorsese movie, ranked](.Â
Note: Please send sleep and complaints to Mark Gongloff at mgongloff1@bloomberg.net.
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