New from me in @nytopinion: all presidents lie, but Trump's lies are qualitatively different. When others lied, they lied out of a weird kind of respect for democratic guardrails. Trump lies to crush those guardrails into scrap metal. https://t.co/i0ZRDplrRe
— Michael Tomasky (@mtomasky) June 11, 2020
Fact Checker: President Trump made 19,127 false or misleading claims in 1,226 days https://t.co/TZYzNcgCOj
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) June 1, 2020
#FactsFirst https://t.co/esRFIQfEcI
— Christopher C. Cuomo (@ChrisCuomo) June 3, 2020
Here is my breakdown of Donald Trump's 654 false claims between the day his pandemic task force started meeting, January 27, and May 3. https://t.co/pkGi695nM0
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) May 29, 2020
Rare deflation! On May 12, Trump bragged that he had appointed "280" new judges. Tonight: "260" new judges. (The actual number was under 200 on both occasions.) https://t.co/7znDBnVWGZ
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) May 28, 2020
Opinion: Trump has told 16,000 lies.
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) May 28, 2020
Now he’s trying to silence those who correct him. https://t.co/lw76vAW9hZ
"I think we're absolutely seeing a really dangerous and concerning high watermark in terms of the spread of false and misleading information and conspiracy theories." @CraigSilverman @BuzzFeedNews w/ @Yamiche https://t.co/ELvAy3dcRy
— Judy Woodruff (@JudyWoodruff) May 27, 2020
Fact check: President Trump falsely claims California is sending mail-in ballots to undocumented immigrants https://t.co/jYfAmxfg5r
— CNN (@CNN) May 27, 2020
These daily disgraces – lying about mail-in ballots, smearing Joe Scarborough, misleading the public about masks – are all a part of the war on truth. This war is so intense that attaching small labels to tweets seems like spitting into a hurricane. Tell me if I'm wrong… pic.twitter.com/kNIxbo5pyu
— Brian Stelter (@brianstelter) May 27, 2020
Remembering the Pulse nightclub shooting.
— PolitiFact (@PolitiFact) June 12, 2020
Trump said it "wouldn’t have happened" if someone at the Orlando nightclub had been armed. A uniformed off-duty police officer worked security that night and exchanged gunfire with the shooter. https://t.co/K6oxUffQOX pic.twitter.com/Bhy09sX9PV
I forgot to tweet last week's Trump-checking video, which was about some of the president's many and varied lies about supposed voter and election fraud: pic.twitter.com/ZpQHXabcka
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) June 6, 2020
This week's video on Trump's dishonesty is on (some of the) ways the president and his team tried to smear and mislead about the George Floyd protests: pic.twitter.com/GIfFBBzEuy
— Daniel Dale (@ddale8) June 6, 2020