Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Who’s right in Trump-Bush clash?

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WASHINGTON (AP) – Viewers of the second Republican presidenti­al debate heard inflated claims about Planned Parenthood abortion practices and a dubious assertion by Donald Trump that he wasn’t interested in establishi­ng casinos in Florida when anti-gambling Jeb Bush was running for and serving as governor.

Some of the claims in the debate Wednesday night and how they compare with the facts:

BUSH: “The one guy that had some special interests that I know of that tried to get me to change my views on something – that was generous and gave me money – was Donald Trump. He wanted casino gambling in Florida.” TRUMP: I didn’t. ... Totally false....” BUSH: “I’m not going to be bought by anybody.”

TRUMP: “I promise if I wanted it, I would have gotten it.”

THE FACTS: Trump’s hopes of expanding casino operations in Florida in the mid-1990s were well known at the time. Trump employed a prominent lobbyist to represent his gambling interests in Florida. And news reports from that time show he hosted a fundraiser to help Bush’s campaign for governor and donated $50,000 to the Florida Republican Party during that campaign.

Bush did not bend in his opposition to casino gambling. It is not clear whether Trump approached Bush directly on the casino matter, but his interest in the enterprise is a matter of record.

TEXAS SEN. TED CRUZ: “On these videos, Planned Parenthood also essentiall­y confesses to multiple felonies. It is a felony with 10 years’ jail term to sell the body parts of unborn children for profit. That’s what these videos show Planned Parenthood doing.”

THE FACTS: The Center for Medical Progress released five videos showing furtively recorded conversati­ons with Planned Parenthood officials, recorded by people posing as representa­tives of a fictitious private company that buys fetal tissue for researcher­s. In the videos, Planned Parenthood officials discuss how they obtain tissue from aborted fetuses for research, how they decide how much to charge and how it’s possible to alter the procedure to enhance the chances of recovering the organs being sought.

But the officials also repeatedly say they are only allowed by law to recover costs, not to make a profit. The videos don’t unambiguou­sly show otherwise.

TRUMP: “I want to build a wall, a wall that works. So important, and it’s a big part of it.”

BEN CARSON: “I was down in Arizona a few weeks ago at the border. I mean, the fences that were there were not manned, and those are the kind of fences when I was a kid that would barely slow us down. So, I don’t see any purpose in having that.”

THE FACTS: The expectatio­n that a fence all along the border with Mexico could stop illegal crossings is not borne out by the fencing that’s already been built – about 700 miles of it. But neither is that fence as porous as Carson suggests. The reality is somewhere in between.

Maintainin­g the existing multibilli­on-dollar fencing has been a time-consuming task for Border Patrol agents, who routinely patrol the fence line looking for holes or other damage.

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