By Lori Robertson and Robert Farley
Summary
ANALYSIS โSince he entered politics, President Donald Trump has been a regular on our end-of-year list of the most egregious and noteworthy falsehoods and distortions. With Trump back in the White House in 2025, itโs no surprise that he dominates this yearโs whoppers.
Trump is known for rhetoric that uses inaccurate and exaggerated claims, which he repeats again and again. In his second term, several such claims were used to justify a whirlwind of policy changes and announcements. Using a method economists said wasnโt legitimate, he calculated โreciprocal tariffsโ for goods imported from other countries. In firing the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, he claimed without evidence that low job growth figures were โphonyโ or โrigged.โ In supporting a freeze on foreign aid, Trump said $50 million was being used to buy condoms for Hamas in Gaza, a claim refuted by theย contractor identified by the State Department.
In a falsehood-filled press conference, Trump, along with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., touted an unproven link between autism and taking Tylenol during pregnancy. Kennedy, long known for spreading inaccurate information about vaccines, also features prominently in this yearโs compilation. In his efforts to change the nationโs vaccine and public health recommendations, he pushed unproven therapeutics for treating measles and made false claims about the COVID-19 vaccines.
There are other politicians on our full list below, which is in no particular order.
Analysis
Tylenol and autism.ย Trumpย saidย a late September press conference would reveal โone of the biggest [medical] announcements โฆ in the history of our country,โ but instead the headline news wasย an unproven link between autism and the use of Tylenol, or acetaminophen, during pregnancy. Trump repeatedly told pregnant women, โdonโt take Tylenol,โ and offered the unsound medical advice to โtough it out.โ
The administration didnโt point to any new original research on the topic, which has been studied. Some studies have shown an association between using acetaminophen during pregnancy and an increased likelihood of having a child with autism, but no causal link has been established. Recent researchย indicatesย there likely isnโt a link. As for Trumpโs medical advice, untreated pain or fever during pregnancy can be harmful to both mother and child, and medical groups have longย recommended pru45reeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeedent use of the drug โ taking acetaminophen when needed in consultation with a doctor.
HHS Secretary Kennedy laterย falsely claimedย that two circumcision-related studies provided evidence that acetaminophen causes autism when given to children. Thatโs not what the studies found. In November, the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionย changed a webpageย to say that its previous statement that โvaccines do not cause autismโ is โnot an evidence-based claim,โ echoing Kennedyโs prior misrepresentations of science.
Inflation has not โstopped.โย As cost-of-living issues continue to beย a top concernย for voters, Trump has repeatedly claimed that inflation is โstopped,โ โdeadโ orย at a lower rateย than it actually is, falsely saying the country saw โthe worst inflationโ in history (or โprobablyโ did so) under former President Joe Biden. Thatโs not the case. This month, in a speech about the economy in Pennsylvania, Trump wronglyย saidย he โinherited the worst inflation in the history of our country.โ
The annualizedย inflation rateย was 3 percent when Trump took office in January, and it was 3 percent again for the 12 months ending in September, the latest data available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Inflation did rise considerably in the first half of Bidenโs term, but it then cooled substantially. From July to December 2024, the annual increase in the Consumer Price Index was below 3 percent.
The CPI went up 2.7 percent for the 12 months ending in November, BLSย saidย today, noting that data collection for the month began Nov. 14 due to the government shutdown.
Theย worst inflationย increase year-to-year occurred after World War I, a 23.7 percentrise from June 1919 to June 1920. There have been numerous other times with inflation higher than the peak point under Biden.
As we head into the midterms, weโd caution voters that politicians often blame their opponents for rising prices, but the causes of inflation are usually more complicated than that. For instance, Labor Dayย claimsย from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee blamed House Republicans for โdriving up the price of burgers.โ But drought conditions in recent years, among other factors, drove up the cost of ground beef.
Russia, not Ukraine, started the war.ย After U.S. and Russian officials met in Saudi Arabia in February to discuss an end to Russiaโs war in Ukraine, Trump falsely reprimanded Ukraine,ย saying, โYou should have never started it.โ He said Ukraine โcould have made a deal.โ Asย we wrote, the war started on Feb. 24, 2022, when Russiaย launched a full-scale invasion, two days after Russiaย recognizedย two separatist territories in eastern Ukraine as independent states and sent Russian troops into Ukraineโs Donbas region. While Russian President Vladimir Putin gave โa long list of grievancesโ to justify the attack, Jeffrey Mankoff, a senior associate with the Europe, Russia, and Eurasia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies,ย wroteย in an April 2022 report that the โfundamental issueโ was โthe legitimacy of Ukrainian identity and statehood.โ
Throughout the year, Trump also repeatedly and wrongly claimed that the U.S. has provided more money in aid to Ukraine than Europe has. Theย oppositeย is true.
โTwisted and manipulatedโ report that wasnโt.ย When the Washington Postย reportedย via anonymous sources that a government intelligence assessment concluded the Venezuelan government was not directing the migration of members of the Tren de Aragua gang to the U.S., Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence,ย dismissedย the report. She said those โbehind this illegal leak of classified intelligenceโ had โtwisted and manipulated [the information] to convey the exact opposite finding.โ But when a redacted copy of the intelligence memo was publicly released the following month, itย corroboratedย the Washington Postโs account. According to the intelligence memo, Venezuelan President Nicolรกs Maduroโs โregime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TDA and is not directing TDA movement to and operations in the United States.โ
A few months later, Gabbardย wronglyย claimed to have uncovered โoverwhelming evidenceโ that former President Barack Obama and others in his administration manipulated intelligence to โlay the groundwork for what was essentially a years-long coup against President Trump.โ
RFK Jr.โs dubious measles therapeutics.ย In March, during a measles outbreak in Texas, Kennedyย claimedย there were โvery good resultsโ from treating patients with a certain steroid and antibiotic, as well as cod liver oil, saying โthose therapeutics have really been ignoredโ by the CDC โfor a long, long time.โ Neither the steroid nor antibiotic is a specific treatment for measles, experts said, and cod liver oil, which contains vitamin A, also isnโt recommended.
Vitamin A itself is recommended around the world for measles, as a couple high-dose bursts of the vitamin have been shown to reduce measles mortality in lower-income countries where deficiencies exist. But the benefit is unclear in the U.S. and countries without such deficiencies. Cod liver oil would need to be consumed in a potentially dangerous amount to get the vitamin A dosage used for measles.
In other comments, Kennedyย downplayedย the outbreak, which ultimatelyย killedย two children, and made unsupported and misleading claims about the measles vaccine, which isย safe and effectiveย in preventing the highly contagious disease.
No evidence of โphonyโ Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers.ย After a BLS report showed less-than-stellar job growth, Trump lashed out at the BLS commissioner,ย sayingย โher numbers were wrong,โ โphonyโ and โrigged,โ and firing her. Thereโs no evidence anyone manipulated the data. William Beach, the BLS commissioner during Trumpโs first term,ย wroteย on X that the firing of Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, a Biden appointee who had worked in the federal government for more than 20 years, was โtotally groundlessโ and โsets a dangerous precedent and undermines the statistical mission of the Bureau.โ
Trump also wrongly claimed that โdays before the election,โ McEntarfer โcame out with these beautiful numbers trying to get somebody else electedโ and then reduced the employment estimates โright after the election.โ Thatโs not what happened. On Nov. 1, 2024, just before the election, the BLS reportย showedย growth of just 12,000 jobs in October and downward revisions for the prior two months.
Signalgate: Not โtotal exoneration.โย Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth claimed that he received โtotal exonerationโ in an investigative report by the Defense Departmentโs Office of Inspector General regarding a Signal group chat about a military attack in Yemen. But the reportย contradictedย that assessment, concluding that Hegsethโs messages โcreated a risk to operational security that could have resulted in failed U.S. mission objectives and potential harm to U.S. pilots.โ The report also faulted Hegseth for using a personal cell phone to relay sensitive DoD information and for not retaining the Signal conversations as official records, as required by federal law and Pentagon policy.
Trumpโs chart on โreciprocalโ tariffs.ย In a Rose Garden announcement in April of sweeping new โreciprocal tariffs,โ Trump held aloft a chart that claimed to give a breakdown of the tariffs other countries charge the U.S. and the corresponding tariff that the U.S. would as a result impose against those countries. But itย turnedย out the values assigned to other countries were not, in fact, the tariff rates other countries were placing on imports of U.S. goods, but rather a calculation of what the administration deemed would be necessary to balance trade with various countries. Economists told us that was not a legitimate way to calculate reciprocal tariffs for countries.
The misleading โreciprocal tariffsโ chart, which informed the tariff rates he then set, was just one of the presidentโs false and misleadingย talking pointsย on tariffs. Among them, Trump repeatedly, and wrongly, claimed that the tariffs he imposed would be paid by other countries and not, at least partly, by American consumers in the form of higher prices.
mRNA vaccine misinformation. Kennedy, and HHS, made a series of false statements about mRNA vaccines, the technology behind the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines. In announcing the termination of half a billion dollars of funding for mRNA vaccine projects, Kennedyย said: โWe reviewed the science, listened to the experts, and acted,โ claiming that โthe data show these vaccines fail to protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like COVID and flu.โ
The science โ peer-reviewed scientific literature โ and many experts refute that. Studies repeatedly demonstrated the vaccinesโ effectiveness and safety, with someย estimatesย of millions of lives saved during the pandemic, and the technology has shown encouraging results against the flu. HHS later released aย 181-pageย listย of papers that claimed to show vaccine harms, a document that wasnโt peer-reviewed and was written by people who have spread unsupported claims about COVID-19 vaccination and treatment.
Kennedy alsoย claimedย the COVID-19 vaccines posed a โprofound riskโ to children, even though serious side effects are rare. In ending funding to Moderna for developing mRNA vaccines against influenza viruses, HHS spokespeople wronglyย saidย the mRNA technology is โunder-tested.โย
DOGE distortions, $50 million not for condoms for Gaza.ย Before taking office, Trumpย saidย entrepreneur Elon Musk would head his new Department of Government Efficiency. Musk had initially promised to cut โat least $2 trillionโ in wasteful government spending. Foreign aid was one of the first targets, with Trump setting the tone for questionable information that would plague the program byย claiming, โWe identified and stopped $50 million being sent to Gaza to buy condoms for Hamas.โ The contractor identified by the State Departmentย saidย it provides hospital services in Gaza and has not used U.S. funds โto procure or distribute condoms.โย
In hisย address to Congressย in March, Trump made the inflated claim that DOGE had โfound hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud.โ However, the DOGE website at the time stated that the department had only generated $105 billion in savings and only purported to provide evidence to support $19.8 billion of that total.ย (The website currently claims DOGE createdย $214 billionย in savings, providing information on about $61 billion. Itโs unclear how much, if any, of that is related to fraud.)
Trump also claimed DOGE had identified millions of dead individuals who were incorrectly labeled as alive in the Social Security database, and misleadingly claimed that โmoney is being paid to many of them.โ Social Security Administration internal auditsย showedย that the number of dead recipients still being sent benefits is likely in the thousands, not the millions.
Crime claims behind National Guard deployments. In making claims about high crime or lawlessness in cities as justification for the deployment of National Guard troops, Trump at times exaggerated or got the facts wrong. In early October, heย claimedย that Portland, Oregon, โis burning to the groundโ or has โfires all over the place.โ But Portland Fire & Rescue reported few calls about potential fires near a federal building, the site of protests against Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Portland Police told us the protests โare nowhere near city-wide.โย
Trumpโs statements about the need for National Guard troops in Portland and Chicago focused on overall crime. โThese are unsafe places,โ heย said. But in court filings and other correspondence, the administration said troops were needed to protect ICE officials and federal property.
In Washington, D.C., where the president is the commander in chief of the National Guard, Trump wronglyย saidย that โmurders in 2023 reached the highest rate probably ever.โ Murders had been declining since 2023, when the rate was less than half the rate in 1991. After a federal takeover of the cityโs law enforcement, Trump falselyย saidย an 11-day period with no murders was the โfirst time thatโs taken place in years.โ There was a 16-day period earlier this year.