One of the most extensive compilations of Trump's offenses was published by the conservative National Review. This was published six months before the election. It introduced its list with this statement:
And then it went on to list his four bankruptcies, his refusal to pay contractors, his adultery and divorces, and his many failed enterprises. It lists 20 categories.
Given their number and scale, it can be difficult to keep track of all of Donald Trump’s many scandals and debacles. And so, for those whose heads are still spinning, here is a comprehensive roundup of the man’s disastrous record:
A few days before the election, Politicususa printed the account of a Canadian journalist who fact checked everything Trump said. The article reports:
In Donald Trump "you have a candidate who is frequently saying 20 false things in a day, up to 37 on some days.”Nothing he has done since taking office has diminished his reputation for lying. Factcheck summarizes his presedential performance:
We first dubbed President Donald Trump, then just a candidate, as “King of Whoppers” in our annual roundup of notable false claims for 2015. He dominated our list that year – and again in 2016 – but there was still plenty of room for others.
This year? The takeover is complete.
In his first year as president, Trump used his bully pulpit and Twitter account to fuel conspiracy theories, level unsubstantiated accusations and issue easily debunked boasts about his accomplishments.
And a chorus of administration officials helped in spreading his falsehoods.
The New York Times tracked what Trump said during his first 100 days in office, noting, "The Times has logged at least one false or misleading claim per day on 91 of his first 99 days (Saturday is Day 100). On five days, Mr. Trump went golfing, and on two he made limited public statement."
By November, the Times compiled a list of Trump's falsehoods and explained why each was untrue.
So we have catalogued nearly every outright lie he has told publicly since taking the oath of office. Updated: The president is still lying, so we've added to this list, taking it through Nov. 11, and provided links to the facts in each case.
The Washington Post also kept a record of Trump's lies and published it with this headline:
In 298 days, President Trump has made 1,628 false and misleading claims
USA Today has found Trump to be an offense to the nation. But after one of his latest tweet rages. it declared he is "not fit to clean the toilets in the Barack Obama Presidential Library or to shine the shoes of George W. Bush. " The paper concludefd:
Rock bottom is no impediment for a president who can always find room for a new low.
The media carry out their responsibility as the Fourth Estate in recording his constant malevolence and dishonesty. But it does not examine closely those politicians wiho collude with him to sell out the principles of liberty, equality, and justice in order to impose their own agendas on the country. Nor does it face the fact that Americans elected Trump president and have knowingly chosen to follow the path to deceit and malice that Germany blazed in the 1930s.
In its efforts to make nice to its audience, the press has avoided facing the fact that Trump is what Americans chose as their moral and intellectual emblem. And the lower he sinks, so does the nation, as a matter of its choice. He defines what America has become. Except for those who understand what genuine resistance entails.
In its efforts to make nice to its audience, the press has avoided facing the fact that Trump is what Americans chose as their moral and intellectual emblem. And the lower he sinks, so does the nation, as a matter of its choice. He defines what America has become. Except for those who understand what genuine resistance entails.