15
Lies per Day in 2018
Finding that President
Donald Trump became "increasingly unmoored from the truth in 2018,"
the Washington Post reports that the president told lies to
the American public at about three times the rate he did the previous year—when
voters and the media were already expressing shock at the repeated false
statements coming from the White House.
According to Glenn
Kessler, author of the Post's Fact Checker column, during his
"year of unprecedented deception," Trump told an average of 15 lies
per day in 2018, bringing the total number of documented lies since he took
office in January 2017 to 7,645.
At the beginning of
2018, according to the paper's tally, the president had told about
2,000 lies while in office.
"Through May, he generally averaged about 200 to 250 false claims a month. But his rate suddenly exploded in June, when he topped 500 falsehoods, as he appeared to shift to campaign mode. He uttered almost 500 more in both July and August, almost 600 in September, more than 1,200 in October and almost 900 in November. In December, Trump drifted back to the mid-200s."
The president's rate
of lying exploded around the time that his administration's family separation
policy provoked international outrage.
The president made two
of his biggest false claims of the year at that time, saying that the White
House had not adopted a policy of separating families who cross the U.S.-Mexico
border but was simply following existing laws passed by Congress.
"The American
public deserves to know what our government has been thinking in terms of how
to carry out these extremely devastating policies,"
Emily Creighton of the American Immigration Council told The Intercept in September, after a Department of Homeland Security memo confirmed that the practice was indeed proposed and approved by the Trump administration.
Emily Creighton of the American Immigration Council told The Intercept in September, after a Department of Homeland Security memo confirmed that the practice was indeed proposed and approved by the Trump administration.
Along with lies that
affected the lives of thousands of families who were seeking asylum, Trump
denied that he had imposed a significant number of tariffs, when he had actually introduced $305 billion in
tariffs on numerous imports; fabricated a claim by the Palm
Beach Post that he was to blame for traffic jams; lied about the number of attendees
at his rallies; repeatedly lied that the suspect in
a 2017 attack in New York in which eight
pedestrians were killed by a pickup truck had brought two dozen relatives to
the U.S. through family-based migration; and told thousands of other falsehoods.
On Twitter,
Kessler's Post colleague, Greg Sargent, wrote that Trump's
repeated lies must be understood as a coordinated disinformation campaign, not
simply a collection of lies about various matters.
"Why does Trump
lie *all the time* about *everything,* even the most trivial, easily
disprovable matters?" Sargent wrote. "The frequency and the audacity
of Trump’s disinformation is the *whole point* of it—to wear you down. More and
more of the lies slip past, undetected and uncorrected."