Look at these recent staid fact-checking headlines from The New York Times:
- "Fact-Checking Trump’s Speech to the N.R.A."
- "Fact Checking Trump’s Inaccurate Tariff and Trade Claims in Florida Rally Speech"
- "Fact-Checking Trump’s Claims on Agriculture, Trade and Poll Numbers"
And from CNN: "Trump continues to mislead on immigration and Puerto Rico disaster funding."
The Washington Post chimes in with "Trump's parade of false claims overseas."
It's no exaggeration to say that an accurate headline for all those entries could have simply been "Trump lies about everything, again." Because in those instances, Trump lied about drug prices, his border wall, international treaty agreements, MS-13, tariffs, existing trade deals, union support for trade deals, agricultural data, his approval ratings, the climate, the Vietnam War, U.S. military drug policy, the Iran nuclear deal, and attacking John McCain.
Should that type of manic, Olympic-style lying really be housed under the same roof as Kirsten Gillibrand incorrectly claiming that the NRA is "largely funded" by gun manufacturers? Or Bernie Sanders saying he received "More votes from young African Americans, Latinos, Asian American, Native Americans than Clinton and Trump combined," a claim CNN tagged as being "unclear"? Or Elizabeth Warren saying, "I supported Massachusetts changing its laws on marijuana," which The New York Times deemed to be something of an exaggeration? Those Democratic fact checks aren't quite the same as debating how many angels can dance on the head of a needle—but they’re close.
The dilemma here is obvious: Media fact-checkers are still using traditional methods to put Democrats under a microscope to look for minute factual stumbles, while Trump is proudly marauding around the country demolishing the truth on an hourly basis. Yet media fact-checkers are using the same methods on him, too. It just doesn't work.
And then there's the problem of the L-word. Most news outlets still won't regularly call Trump a liar, even as their fact-checking operations document his chronic lies—oops, I mean his "falsehoods." Suddenly, with Trump's political ascension, newsrooms became contorted in knots over the simple issue. The debate went like this: "Could a presidential statement, no matter how blatantly false, be deemed a lie since, by definition, the word implies awareness of falsity and intent to deceive? How can journalists know what’s in Trump’s mind, even when he repeatedly says transparently untrue things?" as The Washington Post recently noted.
So instead of categorically pointing out that Trump lies like no other president in American history, the press puts him in the same fact-checking arena as Democrats, who often get ticketed for the minor infraction of embellishing. (The Times claimed Sanders "exaggerated" his claim that 70% of Americans support Medicare for All, even though the Times conceded that a Reuters poll found that 70% of Americans support Medicare for All.) The point: If Trump fact-checks aren't going to call out his lies, then the exercise is useless.
Eric Boehlert is a veteran progressive writer and media analyst, formerly with Media Matters and Salon. He is the author of Lapdogs: How the Press Rolled Over for Bush and Bloggers on the Bus. You can follow him on Twitter @EricBoehlert.
This post was written and reported through our Daily Kos freelance program.
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