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  • 2017-09-18 (xsd:date)
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  • Joy Behar claims that PolitiFact said Donald Trump lies 95 percent of the time (en)
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  • The View co-host Joy Behar gave a selective — and frankly, incorrect — reading of PolitiFact’s rulings on President Donald Trump’s statements during an on-air debate with White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders. Behar brought up Trump’s Truth-O-Meter record during the Sept. 6, 2017, episode of the ABC talk show , asking Sanders how she thought the press should report on his statements. A reader emailed us asking if Behar was accurately describing our rulings, so we took a closer look at the exchange. Is the media supposed to not report on the fact that 95 percent of what he says is a lie? Behar asked. The problem with that, Joy, is that is, you are doing exactly what we are talking about and pushing a false narrative, Sanders replied. Ninety-five percent of what the president says is not a lie. No, it’s not, Behar said. It’s from PolitiFact. It appeared that Behar was referring to Trump’s PolitiFact file , which tracks every statement we’ve rated on the Truth-O-Meter. We compile the results of a person's most interesting or provocative statements in their file to provide a broad overview of the kinds of statements they tend to make. A spokeswoman for The View didn’t clarify Behar’s claim by our deadline. As of Sept. 6, 21 of the 446 statements we examined earned a True rating. That is only 5 percent. Does that mean he lied 95 percent of the time? In a word, no. While we appreciate being a part of a discussion about the facts, Behar wasn’t using our file on Trump properly. Let’s take some time to re-examine what the Truth-O-Meter does and doesn’t do. Meter reader There’s no question Trump has a shaky relationship with the truth. His campaign misstatements earned our 2015 Lie of the Year award , and his Truth-O-Meter record was much worse than Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton during the presidential campaign. His tendency to play loose with facts has continued into his presidency. We’ve given him Pants On Fire ratings for gross distortions saying Charlottesville, Va., counter-protesters didn’t have a permit ; that CNN’s ratings have suffered mightily ; and that allegations his campaign colluded with Russia is a made-up story . He’s also received False ratings for saying President Barack Obama’s immigration policies led to an upswing in MS 13 gang activity ; that his own administration did more in the first 90 days than any other presidency ; and that he’s saved millions of jobs since becoming president. Overall, he’s earned 147 False ratings (33 percent of all the Trump rulings we’ve made) and 69 Pants on Fire ratings (15 percent). Those statements are provably wrong. But to call the rest lies, as Behar did, doesn’t reflect the Truth-O-Meter’s design. We define our ratings in our description of our fact-checking process , which helps us determine the veracity of a statement we’ve chosen to check: TRUE – The statement is accurate and there’s nothing significant missing. MOSTLY TRUE – The statement is accurate but needs clarification or additional information. HALF TRUE – The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details or takes things out of context. MOSTLY FALSE – The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression. FALSE – The statement is not accurate. PANTS ON FIRE – The statement is not accurate and makes a ridiculous claim. So when we rate a statement something less than True but more than False, the speaker can be accurate to some degree, but incorrect because it’s omitting an important angle, being used in the wrong context or drawing a bad conclusion. For example: When Trump tweeted in February, The National Debt in my first month went down by $12 billion, he was using a real statistic from the U.S. Treasury Department. He was clearly attempting to make it appear he was responsible for the decrease. But experts we interviewed said not only did the national debt fluctuate on a regular basis as it continued an inexorable upward climb, there was no way Trump enacted policies leading to the minor (and temporary) drop. We rated Trump’s tweet Mostly False . Trump has received 52 Mostly True ratings, 64 Half True ratings, and 93 Mostly False ratings. Also keep in mind that a person’s PolitiFact file isn’t a comprehensive look at every single statement they make, nor is it a random sample of what they say. It would be logistically impossible for PolitiFact to make informed rulings on every single comment an official makes. We choose to fact-check statements that are interesting to us or to readers, or that are relevant to policy discussions or the news of the day. The content of the statements can sometimes repeat, as well, landing another rating in the file. We’ve rated Trump’s assertion that America is the highest-taxed nation in the world four times over two years, each earning a False rating. This is not to beat a dead horse, but rather to address Trump’s repetition of the falsehood during the campaign. Our ruling Behar said PolitiFact reported that 95 percent of what (Trump) says is a lie. That’s a misreading of Trump’s file, which notes that of the 446 statements we’ve examined, only 5 percent earned a True rating. We’ve rated Trump’s statements False or Pants On Fire a total of 48 percent of the time. The definitions of our Truth-O-Meter ratings make it difficult to call the bulk of Trump’s statements outright lies. The files we keep for people's statements act as a scorecard of the veracity of their most interesting claims. Keep in mind that the statements we rate are neither a random nor comprehensive look at things Trump has said. Behar oversimplified when invoking our Truth-O-Meter rulings. We rate her statement False. Share the Facts 2017-09-18 21:04:01 UTC PolitiFact 2 1 7 PolitiFact Rating: False https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/sarah-sanders-95-percent-president-lie/story?id=49653574 Says PolitiFact reported that 95 percent of what (Donald Trump) says is a lie. Joy Behar The View co-host TV show debate Wednesday, September 6, 2017 2017-09-06 Read More info (en)
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