After months of unemployment holding at 3.7%, the rate dropped to 3.5% in September — its lowest since 1969. And that was far from the only great news in Friday’s jobs report.

Consider the Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers for minorities: Hispanic unemployment dropped to 3.9%, setting a new record, while African American joblessness remained at a record low 5.5%.

And the rate for adults without a high-school diploma dipped to 4.8% — the first time it’s gone below 5% since BLS started collecting the data in 1992.

Plus: “Wages are up by almost 3%” for the year, noted President Trump, “a fantastic increase for everybody out there working.”

Not all the news was as good: Wages barely grew for September, and the total number of employed Americans grew less than expected, at least in this initial report. (Then again, this BLS release did raise the prior number for job growth in August.)

The economy is a winning message for Trump, which is why Democrats are desperate to find any negatives. New York’s own Rep. Carolyn Maloney, vice chair of the Joint Economic Committee, claimed that “economic growth is clearly starting to slow,” even as “too many Americans have yet to fully recover from the recession and enjoy the benefits of the decade-long expansion.”

This, Maloney charged, shows that “the president’s economic policies are causing more harm than good.” Tell that to all the folks who are back to work, ma’am.