AP FACT CHECK: Trump, GOP distort on health care, vote fraud
Trump falsely asserted that he was the one who ensured that people with preexisting medical problems will be covered by health insurance; actually that was Democratic President
A look at statements Monday at the
HEALTH
TRUMP: “We protected your preexisting conditions. Very strongly protected preexisting ... and you don’t hear that.”
THE FACTS: You don’t hear it because it’s not true.
People with preexisting medical problems have health insurance protections because of Obama’s health care law, which Trump is trying to dismantle.
One of Trump’s alternatives to Obama’s law — short-term health insurance, already in place — doesn’t have to cover preexisting conditions. Another alternative is association health plans, which are oriented to small businesses and sole proprietors and do cover preexisting conditions.
Neither of the two alternatives appears to have made much difference in the market.
Meanwhile, Trump’s administration is pressing the Supreme Court for full repeal of the Obama-era law, including provisions that protect people with preexisting conditions from health insurance discrimination.
With “Obamacare” still in place, preexisting conditions continue to be covered by regular individual health insurance plans.
Insurers must take all applicants, regardless of medical history, and charge the same standard premiums to healthy people and those who are in poor health, or have a history of medical problems.
Before the Affordable Care Act, any insurer could deny coverage — or charge more — to anyone with a preexisting condition who was seeking to buy an individual policy.
Democratic attacks on Republican efforts to repeal the health law and weaken preexisting condition protections proved successful in the 2018 midterms, when
VOTING FRAUD
TRUMP, on mail-in voting: “Absentee — like in
THE FACTS: He’s making a false distinction. Mail-in ballots are cast in the same way as absentee mail ballots, with the same level of scrutiny such as signature verification in many states.
In more than 30 states and the
In
More broadly, voter fraud has proved exceedingly rare.
Only nine states currently have plans for “universal” mail-in voting, where ballots are sent automatically to registered voters. Five of those states relied on mail-in ballots even before the coronavirus pandemic raised concerns about voting in person.
TRUMP, on the November vote count and
THE FACTS: No postal scam has emerged from the
He’s said as much. In an interview this month, he admitted he’s trying to starve the
Trump explicitly noted funding provisions that
“If we don’t make a deal, that means they don’t get the money,” Trump told
Over the weekend, the House approved legislation that would reverse recent changes in postal operations and send
During a House hearing, Postmaster General
TRUMP, on defective ballots in an election: “What does defective mean? It means fraud.”
THE FACTS: No, defective ballots do not equate to fraud. The overwhelming majority aren’t.
According to the
Ballots also are deemed defective if there is a missing signature — common with newer voters unfamiliar with the process — or it doesn’t match what’s on file. In addition, some states require absentee voters to get a witness or notary to sign their ballots.
“None of those are fraud,” said
Defective ballots also disproportionately impact voters of color, and recent lawsuits have successfully challenged some requirements as posing health risks or disenfranchising voters. Earlier this year, for instance, a federal judge ruled that a
While the rates of defective ballots are unacceptable, “people should still feel confident in their votes, and they should follow-up,” Weiser said. “People should know these problems are being fought over and hopefully many will be mitigated and addressed before November.”
POLICE
REP.
THE FACTS: No, Biden has explicitly rejected the call by some on the left to defund the police. He has proposed more money for police, conditioned on improvements in their practices.
Biden’s criminal justice agenda, released long before the protests over racial injustice, proposes more federal money for “training that is needed to avert tragic, unjustifiable deaths” and hiring more officers to ensure that departments are racially and ethnically reflective of the populations they serve.
Specifically, he calls for a
BIDEN AGENDA
REP.
RONNA McDANIEL, chairwoman of the
THE FACTS: Those aren't Biden's positions. A number of Republican speakers seized on proposals of the Democratic left, in some cases distorting those positions, and assigned them to Biden, who doesn't share those views.
He does not favor a government takeover of health care; instead he proposes building on “Obamacare,” which preserves the private insurance market while expanding Medicaid.
He also did not endorse proposals to cease border enforcement or even to decriminalize illegal crossings.
Biden supports banning only new oil and gas permits, fracking included, on federal land. But most
In a
PANDEMIC
THE FACTS: He didn’t shut down travel from
The
Additionally, more than 27,000 Americans returned from mainland
Dr.
THE FACTS: No, not all hospitals and front-line workers got the ventilators and personal protective equipment they needed. States were left scrambling in the early weeks of the pandemic, while Trump scoffed at some of their requests, calling them inflated.
While
ECONOMY
THE FACTS: That’s false. The economy was healthy before the coronavirus pandemic hit but not the best in
Economic gains largely followed along the lines of an expansion that started more than a decade ago under Obama. And while posting great job and stock market numbers, Trump never managed to achieve the rates of economic growth he promised in the 2016 campaign, nor growth rates seen in the past.
The Obama-Trump years yielded the longest economic expansion in
McDANIEL: “You deserve to know about their plans to raise taxes on 82% of Americans.”
THE FACTS: That’s not the plan. Biden says he won’t raise taxes on anyone making under
An analysis of Biden’s tax plan by the University of Pennsylvania’s Penn Wharton Budget Model in March found that the bottom 90 percent of income earners would not pay more in federal income taxes under Biden’s proposal.
THE FACTS: Trump's tax cuts are nowhere close to the biggest in
It’s a
Post-Reagan tax cuts also stand among the historically significant: President
Biden has pledged to raise taxes on wealthy people and not the middle class and working class.
Seitz reported from
EDITOR'S NOTE — A look at the veracity of claims by political figures.
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