Why isn't Bernie Sanders talking about jobs?

The 2016 candidate has been strangely silent about them

Time to bring the economy front-and-center, Bernie.
(Image credit: Andrew Burton/Getty Images)

So what do you think should be the top priority for the next president? The Pew Research Center decided to ask voters that question recently, and got a pretty decisive answer: "Economy" and "terrorism" both tied for first place at 77 percent. Education was second place. And third? The "jobs situation" at 64 percent. And if you only talk to people who identify as lower class, "the jobs situation" jumps up to 71 percent, a strong second place.

Yet there's been a weird failure to focus on jobs in the 2016 presidential race. Donald Trump certainly goes at the issue of jobs, but mainly by promising how he's going to beat China and immigrants into submission to get them back. And the Republicans are a slow-rolling disaster on economics anyway. But the Democrats seem to have trouble getting a solid grip on the matter of job creation as well.

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Jeff Spross

Jeff Spross was the economics and business correspondent at TheWeek.com. He was previously a reporter at ThinkProgress.