Austin American-Statesman

Top 10 fact-checks of politician­s, pundits in 2023

- Samantha Putterman

As 2023 ends, we wanted to take a look back at which pundit and politician fact-checks most captured PolitiFact readers’ attention during the year.

Here’s the list.

10. Matt Walsh: “Tuck-friendly” bathing suits at Target “are available in kids’ sizes.”

Our ruling: False

As part of its LGBTQ+ Pride collection, Target sold adult swimwear with “tuckfriend­ly constructi­on” that had extra crotch coverage to “tuck” private parts.

But misleading posts about the swimwear quickly spread online, with conservati­ve commentato­rs, such as Matt Walsh, and social media accounts, such as Libs of TikTok and Gays Against Groomers, claiming that the retailer was selling the bathing suits for children.

The swimwear was available only in adult sizes, a Target spokespers­on told PolitiFact. The retailer’s website labeled the swimsuit seen in the video we factchecke­d as a “Pride Adult One Piece Colorblock Swimsuit.”

9. Donald Trump: “They are trying to make it illegal to question the results of a bad election.”

Our ruling: False

In August, former President Donald Trump framed the special counsel’s federal indictment against him as an attempt to criminaliz­e raising questions about election results. But the Aug. 1 indictment alleging Trump tried to subvert the 2020 presidenti­al election results said he “had a right, like every American, to speak publicly about the election” and make false claims. It said Trump also was entitled to challenge the results lawfully through recounts, audits or lawsuits.

Trump’s indictment was related to his actions, not questionin­g the election. The indictment says he “pursued unlawful means of discountin­g legitimate votes and subverting the election results,” amounting to criminal conspiraci­es.

8. Scott Adams: People not vaccinated against COVID-19 “came out the best.”

Our ruling: False

In January, cartoonist Scott Adams, who created the “Dilbert” comic strip, claimed in a YouTube livestream that people who aren’t vaccinated against COVID-19 are better off than those who are.

But data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and medical experts has consistent­ly shown that unvaccinat­ed people are at greater risk than vaccinated people of getting infected by COVID-19 and dying from it. COVID-19 vaccines have a strong safety record, and infection alone provides only limited protection.

Usually, vaccine side effects are minor and emerge within days, not years later. Some people who get infected with COVID-19 experience “long COVID” — physical effects and disorders that can last for years.

7. Laura Ingraham: Video clip shows that protesters in Tennessee “made their way onto the state Capitol floor.”

Our ruling: False

A video of a protest at the Tennessee Capitol in March over gun violence didn’t show unauthoriz­ed protesters on the House floor, as Fox News host Laura Ingraham claimed.

Protesters marched on the state Capitol days after three adults and three children were killed in a deadly mass shooting at the Covenant School in Nashville, Tenn. The video Ingraham shared showed three Democratic legislator­s who took over the lectern and led chants echoed by protesters who had gathered in the viewing galleries, which were open to the public.

6. Gavin Newsom: “Per capita, more Floridians move to California than California­ns moving to Florida.”

Our ruling: Mostly True

We found that California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, was on track when he told Fox News host Sean Hannity in June that, per capita, more Floridians have moved to California than the other way around. U.S. Census Bureau data from 2021, the latest available, backs that up.

This has been a slight trend for decades, experts said. But the difference between the rate of Floridians moving to

California and vice versa is tiny and based on estimates, and there’s debate on whether the difference is statistica­lly significant.

5. Donald Trump: The Trump administra­tion “built nearly 500 miles of border wall.”

Our ruling: Half True Trump’s administra­tion built 52 miles of new primary border barriers — the first impediment people encounter if they’re trying to cross the southern border with Mexico — where there were none before.

The administra­tion built 458 miles of primary and secondary border barriers, U.S. Customs and Border Protection data showed. The majority were replacemen­ts of smaller, dilapidate­d barriers. Replacemen­t barriers and secondary barriers that are behind primary barriers don’t add miles to the southern border’s total coverage.

4. Donald Trump: “The same people that raided Israel are pouring into our once beautiful USA, through our TOTALLY OPEN SOUTHERN BORDER, at Record Numbers.”

Our ruling: Pants on Fire! Trump made this claim on his Truth Social platform days after Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7. But terrorism experts told PolitiFact that there’s no proof that Hamas’ militants have been “pouring” across the U.S. southern border, and the Department of Homeland Security said there’s no intelligen­ce to back up the claim.

People aren’t crossing the southern border to conduct terrorist attacks or take over parts of the United States, immigratio­n experts said. A small percentage might commit crimes, such as selling drugs, but most come for jobs and political freedom.

3. Gavin Newsom: “We are more energy independen­t today” under President Joe Biden.

Our ruling: Half True

In a conversati­on with Hannity after the second Republican presidenti­al debate in September, Newsom said the U.S. was more energy independen­t under Biden. His statement came in response to a claim by then-candidate and former Vice President Mike Pence during the debate that the country achieved energy independen­ce during his tenure when Trump was president.

In several measurable ways, the U.S. has moved toward energy independen­ce in recent years. Experts said, though, that this hasn’t meant genuine energy independen­ce. The U.S. still depends on internatio­nal crude oil for key elements of its energy needs, making it sensitive to overseas developmen­ts in energy, trade and foreign policy.

Energy independen­ce gains under Trump’s leadership have strengthen­ed under Biden, data shows.

2. Joe Biden: “One quarter” of today’s $31.4 trillion federal debt “was accumulate­d in the four years of my predecesso­r,” Donald Trump.

Our ruling: Half True

Biden’s number is accurate — about one-fourth of the total debt incurred as of January 2023 came during Trump’s presidency.

However, assigning debt to a particular president is tricky, because so much of the spending was approved by decades-old, bipartisan legislatio­n that set the parameters for Social Security and Medicare. A different calculatio­n shows more debt stemming from former President Barack Obama, with whom Biden served as vice president.

1. Tucker Carlson: Capitol Police officers “helped” QAnon Shaman Jacob Chansley and “acted as his tour guides.”

Our ruling: Pants on Fire!

In the top spot is former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who claimed in March that Capitol Police officers acted as “tour guides” for “QAnon Shaman” Jacob Chansley during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

But available evidence rebuts this. Officers repeatedly asked Chansley to leave the building. This is corroborat­ed by the plea agreement Chansley signed and a Capitol Police officer’s account of the events.

Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger called Carlson’s claim “outrageous and false” in an internal department memo. He wrote that officers used de-escalation tactics to try to persuade rioters to get one another to leave the Capitol.

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