Pence’s claim that ‘more Americans are working today than ever before in American history’

The following article by Nicole Lewis was posted on the Washington Post website November 28, 2017:

Credit: Ross D. Franklin/AP

“There are more Americans working today than ever before in American history.”
— Vice President Pence, remarks during a speech at the Tax Foundation, Nov. 16, 2017

We’ve grown accustomed to the Trump administration making grand statements about the president’s purported impact on the economy. Typically, it goes a little something like this: An official will bemoan the economic stagnation of the past eight years before running through a list of ways President Trump has (allegedly) already made great progress by cutting regulationscreating jobs and sending the stock market soaring. Continue reading “Pence’s claim that ‘more Americans are working today than ever before in American history’”

GOP lawmaker uses fuzzy math to make case for small-business tax cuts

The following article by Nicole Lewis was posted on the Washington Post website November 27, 2017:

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) argues cutting taxes for small businesses would bolster the economy. But it’s not that simple. (Meg Kelly/The Washington Post)

“We are $20 trillion in debt. The projected deficit over the next 30 years is over $100 trillion. Maybe as much as $129 trillion. From my standpoint, it’s not time to cut individual tax rates. What it’s time to do is make American businesses competitive globally so our economy can grow. And again, the stat that I just told you about. . . . Revenues increased to the federal government by $1.2 trillion per year even with the meager economic growth we’ve had since 2009.”

— Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), remarks during an appearance on CNN’s “New Day,” Nov. 16, 2017

Johnson has expressed opposition to the GOP tax plan approved by the Senate Finance Committee by arguing that it does not provide enough of a tax reduction for small businesses compared with big corporations. Cutting the tax rate for these businesses, Johnson argues, would boost the economy, thus increasing the amount of revenue collected by the federal government. Continue reading “GOP lawmaker uses fuzzy math to make case for small-business tax cuts”

Ted Cruz’s claim that two-thirds of the Hurricane Sandy bill ‘had nothing to do with Sandy

The following article by Glenn Kessler was posted on the Washington Post website August 29, 2017:

The Texas senator repeats myths about the funding for Sandy relief, which led him to oppose the 2013 bill. (Meg Kelly/The Washington Post)

“The problem with that particular bill is it became a $50 billion bill that was filled with unrelated pork. Two-thirds of that bill had nothing to do with Sandy.”
— Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), interview with NBC’s Katy Tur, Aug. 28, 2017

Hypocrisy watch! Now that Houston and much of southeastern Texas is swamped by Hurricane Harvey, critics (including Northeastern lawmakers) have complained that Texas senators and members of Congress are seeking emergency federal aid but refused to back relief for the victims of Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Continue reading “Ted Cruz’s claim that two-thirds of the Hurricane Sandy bill ‘had nothing to do with Sandy”

Fact-checking President Donald Trump’s campaign rally in Phoenix

The following article by Aaron Sharockman and Miriam Valverde was posted on the Politifact website August 22, 2017:

President Donald Trump reacts to the song as he arrives at a rally at the Phoenix Convention Center, Tuesday, Aug. 22, 2017, in Phoenix. Credit: AP Photo/Alex Brandon

President Donald Trump defended his response to the violence in Charlottesville, Va., during a campaign rally in Phoenix, on Aug. 22, blaming the media for distorting or omitting his full comments.

“The media can attack me, but where I draw the line is when they attack you,” Trump said. “It’s time to challenge the media for their role in fomenting divisions. And yes by the way they are trying to take away our history and our heritage, you see that?”

We fact-checked several of Trump’s claims.

Trump reads his first statement on Charlottesville, leaves out “many sides” comment.

Continue reading “Fact-checking President Donald Trump’s campaign rally in Phoenix”

President Trump’s claim of Obamacare ‘bailouts’ for insurance companies

The following article by Glenn Kessler was posted on the Washington Post website August 7, 2017:


Do insurance companies get ‘bailouts’ under Obamacare? Washington Post Fact Checker Glenn Kessler investigates. (Video: Meg Kelly/Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

“If a new HealthCare Bill is not approved quickly, BAILOUTS for Insurance Companies and BAILOUTS for Members of Congress will end very soon!”

— President Trump, in a tweet, July 29, 2017

“Bailout” is a pejorative term in Washington. After Republicans in the Senate failed to pass a bill that would replace the Affordable Care Act, the president threatened to end what he termed “bailouts” for insurance companies and members of Congress.

What’s he talking about? And are these really bailouts? Continue reading “President Trump’s claim of Obamacare ‘bailouts’ for insurance companies”

Fact Checker’s guide to obstruction of justice, executive privilege and impeachment

The following article by Michelle Ye Hee Lee was posted on the Washington Post website July 10, 2017:

The special counsel overseeing the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 elections widened the scope of the probe — including whether President Trump obstructed justice when firing James B. Comey as FBI director. Now, with every new development, Trump’s critics are quick to call for his impeachment and label his actions as obstruction of justice.

Yet this is not a simple process, and many times, such reactions are exaggerated. It’s still early in the investigation, with no indication yet whether any findings could lead to potential charges. Continue reading “Fact Checker’s guide to obstruction of justice, executive privilege and impeachment”

Justice Alito’s misleading claim about sex offender rearrests

The following article by Michelle Ye Hee Lee was posted on the Washington Post website June 21, 2017:

“Repeat sex offenders pose an especially grave risk to children. ‘When convicted sex offenders reenter society, they are much more likely than any other type of offender to be rearrested for a new rape or sexual assault.’”
–Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., concurring opinion in Packingham v. North Carolina, June 19, 2017

In 2008, North Carolina passed a law banning convicted sex offenders from accessing websites where minors can sign up. Two years later, Lester Packingham, a registered sex offender who in 2002 pleaded guilty to a sex crime involving a kid, ran afoul of the law. He posted a picture of himself on Facebook under an alias account, celebrating a win in traffic court. A police officer spotted this post and arrested him. Continue reading “Justice Alito’s misleading claim about sex offender rearrests”

Fact Check: These Statements by Trump’s Cabinet Don’t Match Policy

The following article by Linda Qiu was posted on the New York Times website June 13, 2017:

Source: Wikipedia (public domain)

Members of the White House cabinet took turns praising President Trump at a gathering on Monday, adopting the commander in chief’s evaluations of himself. Their mimicry was not limited to a day of flattery; several have also adopted Mr. Trump’s rhetorical style of doubling down on false claims and pushing so-called alternative facts.

At least four Trump administration cabinet secretaries have defended austere budget cuts and policy shifts at their departments with misleading statements in congressional testimony and other official settings. Here’s an assessment. Continue reading “Fact Check: These Statements by Trump’s Cabinet Don’t Match Policy”

Fact check: Another week of Washington bluster

The following article by Calvin Woodward and Jim Drinkard of the Associated Press was posted on the Boston Globe website March 18, 2017:

AL DRAGO/NEW YORK TIMES
White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer got the facts wrong on deductibles under the Affordable Care Act.

President Donald Trump’s first spending plan for the government and a report by the Congressional Budget Office on Republican health care kicked up quite a fuss in Washington over the past week. Bold claims flew on those developments and more. Many don’t hold up to scrutiny:

Budget and Economy

TRUMP: ‘‘Already, because of this new business climate, we are creating jobs that are starting to pour back into our country like we haven’t seen in many, many decades. In the first two job reports since I took the oath of office, we’ve already added nearly half a million new jobs. And believe me, it’s just beginning.’’ — Tennessee rally, Wednesday.

THE FACTS: The president has yet to implement policies that would influence hiring on a national scale, despite his aggressive rhetoric on job creation. Nor has his presidency hurt job growth, judging by declines in unemployment in Barack Obama’s last month in office and Trump’s first. Trump takes undue credit for hiring that has yet to occur and for the return of jobs from overseas that have yet to come back. He’s boasted about hiring plans by General Motors, Ford and other companies that were in the works before he took office.

***

MICK MULVANEY, Trump’s budget director: ‘‘Let’s talk about after-school programs generally. They’re supposed to be educational programs, right? And that’s what they’re supposed to do, they’re supposed to help kids who can’t — who don’t get fed at home, get fed so that they do better at school. Guess what? There’s no demonstrable evidence they’re actually doing that. There’s no demonstrable evidence they’re actually helping results, helping kids do better at school.’’ — Thursday.

THE FACTS: There is such evidence and it comes from the government as well as multiple scientific studies.

Says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , for example: ‘‘Student participation in the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) School Breakfast Program (SBP) is associated with increased academic grades and standardized test scores, reduced absenteeism, and improved cognitive performance (e.g., memory).’’

Another example: A Harvard study found that after-school programs in general lead to better grades, social development, health and wellness.

Mulvaney appeared to be referring to 21st Century Community Learning Centers, a $1.2 billion program that the Trump administration tabbed in its budget proposal for elimination. The program provides after-school meals along with sports, clubs and enrichment activities. Its primary goal is to provide child care for the parents of 1.6 million kids, allowing them to maintain their jobs and incomes.

* * *

TRUMP: Speaking of the request in his new budget for a $54 billion increase for the Pentagon, ‘‘Our budget calls for one of the single largest increases in defense spending history in this country.’’

THE FACTS: Trump’s proposed increase, 10 percent higher than the Defense Department’s current budget, is large, but a long way from the highest boost ever. In just the past 40 years, there have been eight years with larger increases in percentage terms than the one he’s now proposing.

In the early 1980s, for example, defense spending was increased dramatically as the Cold War with the Soviet Union intensified. The 1981 Pentagon budget saw a nearly 25 percent increase.

And the proposed expansion pales in comparison with earlier times. Military spending consumed 43 percent of the economy in 1944, during World War II, and 15 percent in 1952, during the Korean War. It was 3.3 percent in 2015, says the World Bank.

NATO

TRUMP: ‘‘Many (NATO) nations owe vast sums of money from past years and it is very unfair to the United States. These nations must pay what they owe.’’ — Friday.

THE FACTS: Other NATO countries do not have a past debt owing to the alliance or to the U.S.

The issue is that most of the 28 NATO member countries have not been living up to a commitment to spend 2 percent of their gross domestic product on defense. The Trump administration is leaning on them to start meeting that commitment. But the U.S. is not trying to wring money from past years out of them.

Health care

TRUMP: Claiming blanket conversion of Republican House members Friday for the GOP health care bill, ‘‘We just had a meeting with probably 12 congressmen, and it was an amazing meeting because they were all noes … all noes or pretty much no … but after 15 minutes, they went from no to all yeses.’’ Going into the meeting, there were ‘‘no yesses.’’

THE FACTS: Trump is overstating his powers of persuasion. There were actually 13 lawmakers present, according to a White House attendance sheet, and at least five of them were already on board before they went into the meeting.

Two of those present, Reps. Steve Scalise and Patrick McHenry, are members of the House GOP leadership who are in charge of rounding up votes for the GOP replacement for Obamacare. Two others, Reps. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Bruce Westerman of Arkansas, had voted for the bill in their committees. And another, Rep. Andy Barr of Kentucky, spoke favorably about the bill in a March 9 speech, calling it a ‘‘crucial and necessary first step.’’

* * *

TRUMP, on Obama’s health care law: ‘‘It’s a disaster. Obamacare is dead.’’ ‘’It’s just about on its last legs.’’ Insurers are leaving the program and ‘‘many states are down to one.’’ — Friday.

THE FACTS: Obamacare has problems, but they’re not as dire as Trump describes.

The problems include premium increases and decisions by some insurers to leave the marketplace created by the law for people who buy their own policies. Five states — Alaska, Alabama, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Wyoming — have just one participating insurer across their entire jurisdictions. At the county level, more than 1,000 counties in 26 states are down to one insurer — about one-third of U.S. counties.

Premium increases are offset by subsidies for about 8 in 10 customers who buy individual health insurance policies through government-sponsored markets like HealthCare.gov. But millions who purchase their policies outside the marketplaces get no financial assistance.

A report from the Congressional Budget Office, though, says the market for individual policies in most places is ‘‘stable.’’ The report said the market also would probably remain stable under the proposed GOP replacement legislation.

* * *

SEAN SPICER, White House press secretary: ‘‘Having a card and having coverage that when you walk into a doctor’s office has a deductible of $15,000, $20,000 a year isn’t coverage. That’s a car. That doesn’t get you the care you need.’’ — Tuesday.

THE FACTS: He’s wrong about deductibles under Obama’s law.

Out-of-pocket expenses for consumers are limited. Deductibles, copayments and coinsurance together can’t exceed $7,150 this year for an individual plan sold through HealthCare.gov or similar state markets. For a family plan, it’s $14,300. After that, the insurance plan pays the full cost of covered benefits.

In addition, more than half of customers in these plans get subsidies to help with their out-of-pocket costs.

* * *

SEN. CHUCK SCHUMER, Senate Democratic leader, on the CBO report that estimates 24 million more people will be without health insurance in a decade under the Republican legislation to replace Obamacare: ‘‘CBO is virtually unassailable. Everyone, Democrats and Republicans … has gone along with CBO. … They’ve been speaking the truth for decades and to try to attack CBO is simply attacking the messenger.’’ — Monday.

REP. NANCY PELOSI, House Democratic leader, on Republican reaction to the CBO: ‘‘Some of them are trying to pin a rose on this report and make it sound like it’s a good thing and the others of them are trying to discredit the CBO, but it’s completely wrong, completely wrong. … Numbers are quite elegant things, you know.’’ — Monday.

THE FACTS: Democrats have not hesitated to attack this messenger when its conclusions have not suited them.

‘‘The Congressional Budget Office never gives us any credit,’’ President Obama said in 2009 when the CBO pointed to the expense of Democratic health overhaul proposals. Complained Pelosi at the time: ‘‘The CBO will always give you the worst-case scenario.’’

Again in 2014, Pelosi did not consider CBO’s numbers ‘‘elegant,’’ or correct, when they forecast job losses from a Democratic effort to raise the minimum wage. She accused the CBO of making arguments that ‘‘contradict the consensus among hundreds of America’s top economists.’’

* * *

MULVANEY: ‘‘If you have coverage that doesn’t allow you to go to the doctor, what good is it in the first place? … Democrats took all of this credit for giving people coverage, but ignored the fact that they had created this large group of people that still could not go to the doctor.’’ — Monday.

THE FACTS: Republicans gloss over reality when they make this argument. While deductibles are high for the Affordable Care Act’s private insurance plans (averaging $3,000 last year for a standard silver plan), the law requires preventive care to be covered at no charge. And more than half of the people enrolled in the health law’s insurance markets get an extra subsidy when they go to seek care. It can reduce a deductible from several thousand dollars to a few hundred. The GOP bill would repeal those subsidies.

Other evidence points to tangible benefits from Obama’s coverage expansion. For example, government researchers have found fewer Americans struggling to pay medical bills. A 2015 report found that problems with medical bills had declined for the fourth year in a row. Most of the improvement was among low-income people and those with government coverage, and it coincided with the ACA’s big coverage expansion.

Immigration

TRUMP: ‘‘And by the way, aren’t our borders getting extremely strong? … We’ve already experienced an unprecedented 40 percent reduction in illegal immigration on our southern border, 61 percent — 61 percent since Inauguration Day. Sixty-one percent; think about it. And now people are saying we’re not going to go there anymore ‘cause we can’t get in, so it’s going to get better and better.’’ — Rally Wednesday.

THE FACTS: There’s not much evidence yet that Trump is driving down illegal immigration. It’s true that the number of border arrests dropped about 44 percent from January to February. But it’s too early to know if that will hold or what prompted it. Monthly and seasonal fluctuations are common.

Trump hasn’t expanded the ranks of the Border Patrol or any other immigration or border-security agency. His orders haven’t yet changed the way the Border Patrol operates and so far there is no evidence that more people are being deported. The wall he’s promised to build isn’t up.

The number of border arrests is the primary measure of the flow of illegal immigration at the border, though an imperfect one. If fewer people are arrested, that’s taken to mean fewer people are trying. Over recent decades, presidents have tried to have it both ways. They cite low arrest numbers to illustrate how their policies are dissuading people from crossing illegally. When arrest numbers are high, they say that’s because they’re being aggressive in enforcing the border.

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