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The truth behind the rhetoric |
The Nunes memo didn’t prove the FBI spied on the Trump campaign
For all the hype leading up to it,
a memo released by Rep. Devin Nunesfell flat because it failed to prove the FBI spied on President Trump’s campaign. We were told the memo would show an out-of-control FBI going over to the dark side — using information paid for by Democrats (the “Steele dossier”) to secure a court order to spy on a Trump campaign adviser, Carter Page. It turned out to be false advertising. Page was no longer associated with the Trump campaign when the court approved the warrant, as the memo shows, and the FBI had been looking into Page
before the Democrats got involved with the Steele dossier. A few Republicans apparently didn’t get the memo (or didn’t read it), and we gave them Four Pinocchios.
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Trump talks a big game on MS-13, but his numbers are iffy
Every Captain Ahab has a Moby Dick. Trump’s white whale might be the MS-13 gang. He calls them “vicious and disgusting.” He says they’re overrunning cities and infiltrating schools. He claims to have deported MS-13 members by the thousands. He also claims that they’ve been imprisoned by the thousands. We’ve been tracking the president’s statements about this violent criminal organization for months. They keep changing, but they still don’t add up. At The Fact Checker, the truth is our white whale and the Pinocchios our harpoons. We upgraded these claims from Two to Three Pinocchios.
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Bonus: When the U.S. president speaks, the world listens. That’s true even if the president is deriding members of the media as “fake news.” We found that several world leaders have followed Trump’s lead, invoking “fake news” to bat down unfavorable coverage or undermine reporting — often by copycatting the Trump administration’s colorful put-downs.
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We’re always looking for fact-check suggestions.
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