It’s time for our annual round-up of the biggest Pinocchios of the year. It’s been a busy year for us and our Pinocchios at The Fact Checker. There were many contenders, but we picked 12 that stood out among the competition as the most outlandish claims of the year. Some disclaimers: We didn’t include attacks that presidential candidates made against each other, since many of them were included in our list of the biggest Pinocchios of election 2016. Instead, we mostly focused on Four Pinocchio claims politicians made about themselves or about policy matters. We usually try to pick a balanced number of claims by Democrats and Republicans, but that was impossible this year. Donald Trump, who proved to be a serial exaggerator, earned five of the biggest Pinocchios of 2016 — beating President Barack Obama’s record of earning three of the biggest Pinocchios of 2013. (Trump himself also earned three in 2015.) Lastly, we’ll note disturbing trends we saw this year: the rise of bogus statistics and fake news, spread through social media. (PolitiFact declared “fake news” as the Lie of the Year.) We strongly urge our readers to be skeptical about the information they find on Facebook, Twitter or other types of social media. Check out our list below. Click on the quote to read the full fact-check. Enjoy this newsletter? Forward it to someone else who'd like it! If this e-mail was forwarded to you, sign up here for the weekly newsletter. Hear something fact-checkable? Send it here, we’ll check it out. If there was any issue that caused Hillary Clinton to narrowly lose an election that many expected she would win, it was the controversy over her private email server. In this statement, Clinton cherry-picked statements by FBI Director James Comey to skirt more disturbing findings about the FBI investigation. He said that there was no evidence that she lied to the FBI, but he declined to say whether she told the truth to the American people. Clinton later admitted that she had "short-circuited" her answer. Donald Trump has proven to be a sore winner. Rather than tout the fact that he was a dramatic surprise victor, Trump instead has falsely claimed he won an electoral college landslide. He also falsely said that Clinton only won the popular vote because millions of people voted illegally. But neither is true. In terms of electoral college wins, Trump ranks just 46th out of 58 electoral college results. A shift of 40,000 votes in three states would have cost him the presidency. There is also no evidence of massive voter fraud, a notion that Trump apparently obtained from a website that traffics in conspiracy theories. This is our favorite example of why it is often boring to fact check Trump's statements. He claimed he could control the cost of prescription drugs by negotiating prices in the Medicare system – and repeatedly said the savings would be as high as $300 billion. But total spending on prescription drugs in Medicare is just $78 billion. Trump later said he was referring to savings he would get for negotiating a range of products in Medicare. But Medicare spending is $560 billion, so his claim that he would cut 55 percent through better negotiations was still unrealistic. Barack Obama: "We have fired a whole bunch of people who are in charge of these [VA] facilities." President Obama misled the public about the number of people held accountable for the 2014 scandal over manipulated wait-time data at the Department of Veterans Affairs, which contributed to patient deaths. Congress responded by passing a law that sped up disciplinary actions for senior executive service employees. But when Obama made his statement in September, only one senior executive had been removed for a case involving wait time (though the actual firing was for an ethics violation). Sean Hannity, the Fox News personality, promoted this story when Trump was under fire for not having fulfilled a pledge to make a $1 million donation to a military charity. But Trump had nothing to do with helping the Marines; the jet was provided by the Trump Shuttle, under contract with the military, at a time when it had been seized by Trump's bankers for failing to pay loans. Months after we exposed this as a sham, Hannity continues to display this false claim on his website. |
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