Trump made 30,573 false or misleading claims as president. Nearly half came in 
his final year.
By Glenn Kessler
January 23 at 6:35 PM ET


The Fact Checker counted a total of 30,573 false or misleading claims made by 
President Trump during his White House tenure. Here’s what we learned. (Adriana 
Usero/The Washington Post)
He overstated the “carnage” he was inheriting, then later exaggerated his 
“massive” crowd and claimed, despite clear evidence to the contrary, that it 
had not rained during his address. He repeated the rain claim the next day, 
along with the fabricated notion that he held the “all-time record” for 
appearing on the cover of Time magazine.
And so it went, day after day, week after week, claim after claim, from the 
most mundane of topics to the most pressing issues.
Over time, Trump unleashed his falsehoods with increasing frequency and 
ferocity, often by the scores in a single campaign speech or tweetstorm. What 
began as a relative trickle of misrepresentations, including 10 on his first 
day and five on the second, built into a torrent through Trump’s final days as 
he frenetically spread wild theories that the coronavirus pandemic would 
disappear “like a miracle” and that the presidential election had been stolen — 
the claim that inspired Trump supporters to attack Congress on Jan. 6 and 
prompted his second impeachment. 
The final tally of Trump’s presidency: 30,573 false or misleading claims — with 
nearly half coming in his final year.
[Read and search the full database of Trump’s false or misleading claims]
For more than 10 years, The Fact Checker has assessed the accuracy of claims 
made by politicians in both parties, and that practice will continue. But 
Trump, with his unusually flagrant disregard for facts, posed a new challenge, 
as so many of his claims did not merit full-fledged fact checks. What started 
as a weekly feature — “What Trump got wrong on Twitter this week” — turned into 
a project for Trump’s first 100 days. Then, in response to reader requests, the 
Trump database was maintained for four years, despite the increasing burden of 
keeping it up.


The database became an untruth tracker for the ages, widely cited around the 
world as a measuring stick of Trump’s presidency — and as of noon Wednesday it 
was officially retired.
 Whether such a tracker will be necessary for future presidents is unclear. 
Nonetheless, the impact of Trump’s rhetoric may reverberate for years.
“As a result of Trump’s constant lying through the presidential megaphone, more 
Americans are skeptical of genuine facts than ever before,” presidential 
historian Michael Beschloss said.


Trump speaks during a coronavirus briefing at the White House on July 28. By 
the end of 2020, he had made more than 2,500 false or misleading claims related 
to the virus. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
An assessment of the Fact Checker database shows the dramatic escalation in the 
rate of Trump’s dishonesty over time. Trump averaged about six claims a day in 
his first year as president, 16 claims day in his second year, 22 claims day in 
his third year — and 39 claims a day in his final year. Put another way, it 
took him 27 months to reach 10,000 claims and another 14 months to reach 
20,000. He then exceeded the 30,000 mark less than five months later.
[Scroll a visual timeline of the false claims Trump made during his time in 
office]
Trump made false claims about just about everything, big and small, so the Fact 
Checker database provides a window into his obsessions (and the news cycle) at 
the time. When he felt under siege or in trouble, he responded by trying to 
craft an alternative reality for his supporters — and to viciously attack his 
foes. Nearly half of the false claims were communicated at his campaign rallies 
or via his now-suspended Twitter account.


Trump arrives to speak at a rally in Washington, Mich., on Nov. 1. Many of his 
false claims were communicated at his campaign rallies. (Jabin Botsford/The 
Washington Post)
Claims about immigration spiked just before the 2018 midterm elections, as 
Trump unsuccessfully tried to keep the House of Representatives in GOP hands 
with exaggerated claims about “caravans” of undocumented immigrants approaching 
the border. Then in late 2019 he responded to the uproar over a phone call in 
which he urged Ukraine’s president to announce an investigation of former vice 
president Joe Biden with more than 1,000 false and misleading claims on the 
issue in just four months.


False and misleading claims about the coronavirus pandemic emerged in 2020, so 
that by year’s end he had made more than 2,500 coronavirus-related claims — 
more than all of his trade claims over four years, even though trade has been 
one of the animating features of his presidency. Trump touted phony metrics to 
claim he successfully defeated the virus, pitched ineffective “cures” and 
constantly attacked former president Barack Obama for alleged failures, such as 
leaving a “bare cupboard” of ventilators (there were almost 17,000) and 
bungling the response to the swine flu pandemic in 2009-2010 (the response was 
considered a success).
In October, Trump was largely quiet for six days as he recovered from his own 
bout with covid-19. But even so, he made nearly 4,000 false or misleading 
claims that month, an average of 150 a day on the days he was not ill.
In speech after speech, he laid the groundwork for challenging the election, 
making baseless claims of potential election fraud, while attacking Biden as a 
mental incompetent — and a “grimy, sleazy and corrupt career politician” — who 
could not possibly emerge as the victor.
“It’s going to be a fraud,” Trump told Sean Hannity of Fox News a month before 
voters went to the polls. “This is a terrible thing that’s happening to our 
country.”
After his election defeat, Trump spoke or tweeted about little except to offer 
lies about a stolen election, even as he or his supporters lost more than 60 
court cases as judges repeatedly rejected his claims as bogus. After Nov. 3, he 
made more than 800 false or misleading claims about election fraud, including 
76 times offering some variation of “rigged election.”


At his Jan. 6 speech at the Ellipse, in which he incited the attack on the 
Capitol, Trump made 107 false or misleading claims, almost all about the 
election.
The aftermath of what Biden and other Democrats now call the “big lie” hovers 
over Washington as both parties figure out whether there can be a return to a 
shared set of facts undergirding national debate, or whether one of the major 
political parties will remain captive to the sorts of conspiracy theories that 
marked so many of Trump’s final year of claims.
The events of Trump’s final weeks demonstrated the extent to which his 
alternate reality became woven into the fabric of the Republican Party, with 
the majority of GOP lawmakers voting against certifying Biden’s victory even 
after the pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol.
One hallmark of Trump’s fibs was his willingness to constantly repeat the same 
claims, no matter how often they had been debunked. One-fifth of his nearly 
2,500 claims about the economy was the same falsehood — that he was responsible 
for creating the greatest economy in U.S. history. After the coronavirus 
outbreak tanked the economy, he amped up the rhetoric to say he had created the 
greatest economy in world history. Neither claim is true; under just about 
every metric, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Lyndon B. Johnson and Bill Clinton had more 
robust economies during their presidencies. Even before the pandemic, Trump’s 
economy was already faltering because of his trade wars, with the manufacturing 
sector in a technical recession.


During his presidency, Trump made nearly 2,500 false or misleading claims about 
the economy. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Nearly 300 times Trump falsely said that he passed the biggest tax cut in 
history. Even before his tax cut was crafted, he promised that it would be the 
biggest in U.S. history — bigger than President Ronald Reagan’s in 1981. 
Reagan’s tax cut amounted to 2.9 percent of the gross domestic product, and 
none of the proposals under consideration came close to that level. Yet Trump 
persisted in this fiction even when the tax cut was eventually crafted to be 
the equivalent of 0.9 percent of the gross domestic product, making it the 
eighth-largest tax cut in 100 years.


Trump’s penchant for repeating false claims is demonstrated by the fact that 
the Fact Checker database has recorded about 750 instances in which he has 
repeated a variation of the same claim at least three times.
The Fact Checker also tracked Three- or Four-Pinocchio claims that Trump has 
said at least 20 times, earning him a Bottomless Pinocchio. Trump completed his 
term with 56 of those entries, including three — about the “rigged election,” 
allegations that Dominion voting machines changed votes and the falsehood that 
GOP poll watchers were denied access to vote-counting — that only emerged in 
the final months of his presidency.
The Bottomless Pinocchio list gives a rough approximation of the types of major 
falsehoods Trump said during his presidency. Roughly 25 percent exaggerated 
about his accomplishments, and 15 percent misled about his policies. Another 15 
percent dissembled about the Russia investigation or the probe into the Ukraine 
phone call. Roughly 10 percent each were fibs made out of whole cloth, attacks 
on people he considered foes, falsehoods about the coronavirus, phony claims 
about the election, or false statements about Biden and his proposals.
As the 2020 election neared, Trump nearly 50 times falsely reassured his 
supporters that Mexico was footing the $15 billion bill for his barrier along 
the southern border. U.S. taxpayers are paying, mostly via money Trump diverted 
from authorized military construction projects. This was perhaps Trump’s most 
famous campaign promise — during the 2016 campaign, he said more than 200 times 
that Mexico would pay for the wall — so he simply pretended he had fulfilled it 
in an effort to reassure his base that he had succeeded.


Many repeated claims just barely missed the cutoff for a Bottomless Pinocchio, 
such as the claim that he repealed a provision of the U.S. tax code that 
prohibits religious organizations from endorsing or opposing political 
candidates. (All he did was issue a toothless executive order, but he obviously 
thought it was so important to evangelical groups that he falsely claimed he 
achieved one of their key political objectives.)


Rain falls at the White House on  Nov. 30. One of Trump’s false claims early on 
as president was when he disputed that it rained during his inauguration. 
(Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Trump rarely abandons his falsehoods, so as he neared the end of his presidency 
his campaign rallies became longer and longer. Each speech had a familiar 
pattern. He would cycle through various grievances about the investigation by 
special counsel Robert S. Mueller III and the impeachment over his Ukraine 
call. He trashed Obama, various Democrats and of course Biden. He falsely 
extolled his achievements in trade, foreign policy, the economy and 
immigration. He offered false assurances about the pandemic and warned darkly 
about fraud in the upcoming election.
The growth of falsehoods over the course of Trump’s presidency is illustrated 
by one remarkable statistic.
The Fact Checker team recorded 492 suspect claims in Trump’s first 100 days. 
Just on Nov. 2, the day before the 2020 election, Trump made 503 false or 
misleading claims as he barnstormed across the country in a desperate effort to 
save his presidency.
The database website has a search engine that will quickly locate suspect 
statements made by Trump. Readers can also isolate claims by time period, 
subject or venue.


Maintaining the database over four years required detailed examination of every 
Trump speech, news conference, press gaggle, campaign rally and interview, as 
well as more than 25,000 tweets. The fact checks of Trump’s statements in the 
database amount to about 5 million words.
The database includes any statement that might merit two or more Pinocchios 
under The Fact Checker’s rating scale. Trump often would repeat the same 
falsehood two or more times in a speech but only one instance of a claim per 
venue would be counted. The database did not include Facebook posts because 
they were often duplicative of tweets and likely staff-generated. The tally 
also generally did not count retweets, except for retweets of false or 
misleading videos.
The fact checks in the Trump database were written by a team that also included 
Salvador Rizzo, Meg Kelly and Michelle Ye Hee Lee. Graphics reporter Leslie 
Shapiro created the database website.

Glenn Kessler has reported on domestic and foreign policy for more than three 
decades. Send him statements to fact check by emailing him, tweeting at him, or 
sending him a message on Facebook.

Roland.
Toronto.

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