Trump’s false claim that alleged terror suspect brought two dozen relatives to U.S.

The following article by Glenn Kessler was posted on the Washington Post website January 17, 2018:

Three times, the president has told a story that falls upon close inspection. (Meg Kelly/The Washington Post)

“This man that came in, or whatever you want to call him, brought in, with him, other people. And he was a point – he was the point of contact, the primary point of contact for — and this is preliminarily — 23 people that came in or potentially came in with him. And that is not acceptable. So we want to get rid of chain migration.”
— President Trump, remarks at a Cabinet meeting, Nov. 1

“Twenty-two to twenty-four people came in through him. He’s a killer. He’s a guy who ran over eight — many people — eight died; 10 to 12 are really badly injured. So I really think that a lot of people are going to agree with us now on that subject.”
— Trump, remarks at a bipartisan meeting on immigration, Jan. 9 Continue reading “Trump’s false claim that alleged terror suspect brought two dozen relatives to U.S.”

The best way to debunk Trump’s lies, according to science

The following article by Joe Romm was posed on the ThinkProgress website January 16, 2018:

Progressives need to debunk Trump directly and repeatedly with good framing.

WASHINGTON, DC – JANUARY 20: Protesters take part in a rally to protest against the President Donald J. Trump’s Inauguration on January 20, 2017 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Noam Galai/WireImage)

What is the best way to respond to Donald Trump’s steady stream of conversation-dominating lies and misrepresentations?

George Lakoff — an expert on message “framing” and author of the 2004 bestseller Don’t Think of An Elephant –– has some advice for progressives when Trump attacks the press (or any other vital institution): Don’t repeat the lies.

He desperately needs your help to succeed.
You can help him by repeating his words and lies. You can help him by focusing outraged attention on his antics.
Or we can work together to redirect the energy, counteract rather than react, and reframe the conversation.

He says, “rather than argue against him directly or waste time refuting his attacks, let’s ignore his antics and make a positive, proactive argument.” Continue reading “The best way to debunk Trump’s lies, according to science”

Trump says that he is ‘not a racist,’ denies souring chances for immigration overhaul by using vulgarity

The following article by Mike DeBonis and Anne Gearan was posted on the Washington Post website January 14, 2018:

President Trump on Jan. 14, said “I am not a racist” and blamed Democrats for the delay in passing deal on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. (The Washington Post)

President Trump said Sunday that he is “not a racist” and denied that he had spoiled chances for an immigration overhaul in Congress by using a vulgarity to describe poor countries.

His remarks came as relations between key GOP and Democratic lawmakers turned poisonous as they debated whether Trump had referred to “shithole countries” in an Oval Office meeting last week with the fate of hundreds of thousands of young immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children hanging in the balance. Trump blamed Democrats for fouling chances for a deal and, in an extraordinary statement, called himself “the least racist person.” Continue reading “Trump says that he is ‘not a racist,’ denies souring chances for immigration overhaul by using vulgarity”

‘As usual, he’s dead wrong’: Former U.S. ambassadors explain London Embassy move after Trump criticism

The following article by Adam Taylor was posted on the Washington Post website January 12, 2018:

President Trump said Jan. 12 that he canceled an official visit to London to dedicate the new U.S. embassy because it was a ‘bad’ real estate deal. (Reuters)

In a tweet sent late Thursday evening, President Trump said he had canceled his trip to Britain next month because he was unhappy with the new U.S. Embassy in London — and accused the Obama administration of making a “bad deal” for an “off location.”

Many Britons disagreed, suggesting instead the president was simply worried his arrival in London would be greeted by mass protests. Those involved in the relocation of the U.S. Embassy in London also say Trump, a former real estate mogul in New York City, has a bad understanding of the deal. Continue reading “‘As usual, he’s dead wrong’: Former U.S. ambassadors explain London Embassy move after Trump criticism”

Trump’s Statement On Canceled London Visit Is Full Of Falsehoods

The following article by Willa Frej was posted on the Huffington Post website January 12, 2018:

He blames Obama for the move, even though it was first planned under Bush.

LONDON ― President Donald Trump offered a classically Trumpian explanation for why he canceled his upcoming trip to the U.K.: the construction of a new U.S. embassy in the British capital represents a bad deal, and he wants nothing to do with it.

“Reason I canceled my trip to London is that I am not a big fan of the Obama Administration having sold perhaps the best located and finest embassy in London for ‘peanuts,’ only to build a new one in an off location for 1.2 billion dollars,” he tweeted late Thursday. “Bad deal. Wanted me to cut ribbon-NO!” Continue reading “Trump’s Statement On Canceled London Visit Is Full Of Falsehoods”

Fact Check: Trump’s Dossier Tweet Full of Dubious Claims

The following article by John T. Bennett was posted on the Roll Call website January 11, 2018:

Tweet registers high on defensive scale, but low on accuracy meter

President Donald Trump on Thursday labeled a dossier of information about his alleged Russia ties “disproven,” suggesting it was directly paid for by the Democratic Party and used by the FBI to tip the scales in the 2016 election.

But each of those claims is dubious at best.

First, here is what the president tweeted just after 6:30 a.m. Thursday, in his own words:

Disproven and paid for by Democrats “Dossier used to spy on Trump Campaign. Did FBI use Intel tool to influence the Election?” @foxandfriends Did Dems or Clinton also pay Russians? Where are hidden and smashed DNC servers? Where are Crooked Hillary Emails? What a mess!

Continue reading “Fact Check: Trump’s Dossier Tweet Full of Dubious Claims”

Oops! White House admits it has zero evidence of voter fraud in 2016 election

The following article by Melanie Schmitz was posted on the ThinkProgress website January 10, 2018:

WASHINGTON, DC – JULY 19: Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach listens as Vice President Mike Pence speaks at the first meeting of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington, DC on Wednesday, July 19, 2017. (Photo by Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

In a court filing on Tuesday, the White House announced that it had not uncovered any preliminary findings of voter fraud in the 2016 election and that it would be destroying confidential voter data initially collected for President Trump’s controversial voter fraud commission, which was disbanded on January 3.

The revelation stands in stark contrast to previous comments made by both Trump and former commission vice chair and Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who claimed in an interview with right-wing outlet Breitbart one week ago that all investigation work would be “handed off” to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), implying that Democrats were becoming “uncomfortable” with how much Republicans had discovered thus far. Continue reading “Oops! White House admits it has zero evidence of voter fraud in 2016 election”

President Trump has made more than 2,000 false or misleading claims over 355 days

The following article by Glenn Kessler and Meg Kelly was posted on the Washington Post website January 10, 2018:

As of Jan. 10, President Trump has made 2,001 false or misleading claims since taking office. He now averages 5.6 per day. (Meg Kelly/The Washington Post)

President Trump has broken 2,000.

With just 10 days before he finishes his first year as president, Trump has made 2,001 false or misleading claims in 355 days, according to our database that analyzes, categorizes and tracks every suspect statement uttered by the president. That’s an average of more than 5.6 claims a day.

Continue reading “President Trump has made more than 2,000 false or misleading claims over 355 days”

Trump Overstates Size of Tax Cuts in Speech to Farmers

The following article by Michael D. Shear and Jim Tankersley was posted on the New York Times website January 8, 2018:

President Trump spoke on Monday to the American Farm Bureau Federation’s annual convention in Nashville. Credit Doug Mills/The New York Times

NASHVILLE — President Trump delivered an economic victory lap during a speech to farmers on Monday in which he vastly overstated the size of the tax cuts passed by Congress late last year and played up a rollback of regulations on American businesses.

Declaring that the “American dream is roaring back to life,” Mr. Trump — who has made clear that he likes big numbers — claimed that the tax overhaul cut taxes by $5.5 trillion when, in fact, the legislation will reduce the overall tax burden on individuals and companies over the next decade by $1.5 trillion, or $4 trillion less than what he cited.

“We have just signed into law the most significant tax cuts and reforms in American history — it’s a total of $5.5 trillion in tax cuts,” Mr. Trump said, adding that most of those benefits would go to “working families, small businesses and — who? — the family farmers.”

Mr. Trump apparently chose to highlight just one side of the ledger — the total amount of tax reductions in the bill that he signed in December — without counting the amount of taxes that were increased in the same legislation to help pay for the bill. White House officials declined to respond to questions about the president’s $5.5 trillion figure.

The new law cut taxes on businesses and individuals but also eliminated many breaks that companies and families rely on to lower their tax burden, effectively raising taxes on some. For instance, while the tax bill cut the corporate rate to 21 percent from 35 percent, it also eliminated several business tax breaks, including one used by some farmers. The bill also scaled back many individual tax breaks, such as the state and local tax deduction and the mortgage interest deduction, to help keep the overall cost of the bill to $1.5 trillion.

The inaccurate boast was part of a speech in which the president sought to underscore the benefits that middle-class families would receive as part of the tax overhaul, which he described as “massive tax cuts” after “years of crushing taxes, crippling regulations and corrupt politics.” To applause from thousands of farmers in the audience, Mr. Trump said the tax cut would exempt most family farms from the estate tax.

“From now on, most family farms and small business owners will be spared — and it really is the word punishment — of the deeply unfair estate tax known as the death tax, so you can keep your farms in the family,” Mr. Trump said.

In reality, only about 80 small businesses and farms would fall under the estate-tax tent this year, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. The new law, which exempts more estates from the tax, will primarily benefit the richest Americans.

The president drew thunderous applause by celebrating the reversal of a regulation known as the Waters of the United States, which many rural landowners had opposed.

“We are streamlining regulations that have blocked cutting-edge biotechnology, setting free our farmers to innovate, thrive, and grow,” he said. “Oh, you are so happy you voted for me. You are so lucky I gave you that privilege.”

The president used the speech to offer a preview of the political message he will deliver to voters as lawmakers prepare for the midterm elections in November. Democrats in Congress, he warned, will try to reverse the tax cuts — which passed entirely along party lines without a single Democratic vote — if they seized the majority this year.

“If the Democrats ever had the chance, the first thing they would do is get rid of it and raise up your taxes, sometimes by up to 40, 50, 60 percent more than you have right now,” Mr. Trump said.

The $5.5 trillion tax figure began circulating last month in a White House news release playing up Mr. Trump’s accomplishments for the year. It claimed the tax bill “provides $5.5 trillion in tax cuts, of which $3.2 trillion, or nearly 60 percent, goes to families.”

That, too, is misleading: Individuals receive a net tax cut of $1.1 trillion over 10 years under the new law, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation. And that falls to under $1 trillion when excluding tax cuts for business income from so-called pass-through companies, which are taxed through the individual code.

The White House’s cherry-picking is also raising hackles among some economists. At a meeting of economists in Philadelphia over the weekend, Kevin Hassett, the chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, drew criticism from liberal economists for claims that centered on one tax cut in the bill while excluding a related tax increase. Mr. Hassett showed a slide indicating that a large portion of the fiscal cost of the bill was related to its expansion of the child tax credit — without mentioning the elimination of dependent exemptions, which essentially offset the gains from the child credit for many families.

Mr. Trump’s speech to the annual Farm Bureau convention, the first for a president in more than two decades, came as the administration released a report about the need to improve America’s rural economy. The report proposed a new focus on issues like expanding rural access to broadband, improvements to health services in farming communities, work force training and the use of biotechnology.

“Unleashing the potential and ingenuity of rural communities is an integral part of making America great again,” the 43-page report states.

The president called for the document in an executive order in April and federal officials convened discussion groups with farmers around the country. The agriculture secretary, Sonny Perdue, said in the report that “while other sectors of the American economy have largely recovered from the Great Recession, rural America has lagged in almost every indicator.”

On Monday, Mr. Perdue told the farmers that the report detailed “the problems that we aim to solve.”

But even as the administration promotes its efforts on behalf of farmers, some of those tending the fields are not so sure of Washington’s approach. They worry that the president’s trade policies have the potential to negatively affect their ability to export their products around the world. And some are angry about new tax provisions that could actually lower tax benefits for small, low-earning farms.

Advocates for farmers and trade analysts say Mr. Trump’s protectionist approach to trade has the potential to shrink the market for food producers in the United States. The president withdrew the country from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a trade deal with Asian nations. And he has threatened to pull the United States from the North American Free Trade Agreement, which has bolstered exports of meat, grains and other commodities.

Many of Mr. Trump’s supporters in the 2016 presidential election come from farming communities. But some now question whether the president’s trade policies are contributing to an advantage for their foreign competitors in countries that are continuing to form trade pacts around the world.

Mr. Trump has promised to negotiate better one-on-one trade deals with other nations, but he has yet to demonstrate much progress toward that goal. In the speech on Monday, he again pledged to negotiate new and better trade deals, particularly with Canada and Mexico.

“We are reviewing all of our trade agreements to make sure they are fair and reciprocal,” he said. “We are going to make it fair for you people again.”

After the speech, the president was scheduled to travel to Atlanta to watch the College Football Playoff national championship game between Alabama and Georgia.

View the post here.

Trump’s repeated claim: ‘We don’t have a surplus with anybody’

The following article by Nicole Lewis was posted on the Washington Post website January 8, 2018:

Credit: Nicole Craine/Bloomberg News

“We don’t have a surplus with anybody. We have the worst deals.”
— President Trump, remarks during a rally in Pensacola, Fla., on Dec. 8, 2017

The United States’ trade deficit with other countries appears to be a thorn in President Trump’s side. He has repeatedly characterized the United States as being on the losing end of the North American Free Trade Agreement and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (from which he withdrew the United States before TPP became a reality). NAFTA governs trade between the United States, Mexico and Canada, and the TPP was intended to facilitate trade between the United States and 11 other countries around the Pacific Ocean. Continue reading “Trump’s repeated claim: ‘We don’t have a surplus with anybody’”