On April 15, the twice impeached, four-times indicted former President Donald Trump walked into a Manhattan courtroom for the first day of his trial for charges of falsifying business records in order to conceal hush money payments to adult film actress Stormy Daniels. Trump and his right-wing media propaganda apparatus swiftly began spreading misinformation about the trial.
Media Matters has compiled this guide for debunking the common myths conservatives have been spreading. Here are a few:
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Trump’s gag order is not, in fact, a violation of his freedom of speech. Experts agree that this gag order is consistent with New York law and court precedent.
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Conservatives have been spreading the false claim that Judge Juan Merchan is blocking Trump from attending his son Barron’s high school graduation. The reality is that Merchan has not yet made a decision regarding Barron’s graduation.
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Another common myth is that Trump should have been charged with misdemeanors, and the charges were filed outside the statute of limitations. The truth is that Trump was charged with felonies because he allegedly concealed an underlying crime and the statute of limitations was extended.
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Of course, few right-wing conspiracy theories are complete without some reference to Hillary Clinton. In this case, conservatives allege that Trump should not be prosecuted because Clinton only paid a fine for the Steele dossier misreporting. The simple fact of the matter is that Trump’s hush money payment case allegedly involved the falsification of business records to conceal a crime, rather than mischaracterizing campaign expenditures.
I invite you to read the entire myths and facts guide here where we provide more details about all the above.
Lara Trump, disgraced former President Donald Trump’s daughter-in-law, was voted co-chair of the Republican National Committee in March. Since then, she has been flip-flopping on the RNC’s relationship with Scott Presler, a QAnon conspiracy theorist. On March 14, she said that she wanted to hire Presler for a job in “our legal ballot harvesting division.” Days later, NBC News reported that Presler would not be hired. Then on her podcast on March 20, she said she would ask Presler to be “part of the team” to help with “the largest legal ballot harvesting operation in the entire country.”
During the April 14 broadcast of Sebastian Gorka’s Newsmax show, Trump clarified her position, declaring, “We are legally partnering with” Presler’s organization “in every possible way.”
In addition to being a QAnon conspiracy theorist, Presler was on the U.S. Capitol grounds during the January 6, 2021, attack. He also worked for Act for America, an organization that the Southern Poverty Law Center has described as an “anti-Muslim hate group.” Furthermore, he was previously linked to lewd photos posted to Craigslist allegedly taken in an RNC office in 2016.
On Tuesday morning’s edition of Fox & Friends, co-host Brian Kilmeade proudly proclaimed that Donald Trump’s tax cuts, passed in 2017, were a “middle-class tax cut predominantly.” In fact, the individual and corporate tax cuts overwhelmingly benefited the rich. This assertion is neither a fact nor an opinion — it’s just false.
In reality, Trump’s tax cuts skewed heavily to the very wealthy. At the time they were passed, an analysis by Moody’s Investors Service projected that more than three-quarters of the $1.1 trillion individual tax cuts would go to people earning more than $200,000 annually, and that economic benefits would fail to trickle down.
Future developments have only confirmed this prediction. The benefits of Trump’s tax cut did not filter through to productivity or wage gains for workers. In fact, 40% of the benefit from individual tax cuts and 53% of the corporate tax cuts went to the top 5% of income groups, while also failing to boost worker earnings compared to high-paid executives.
While Republicans and their propaganda arm try to paint themselves as champions of the working class, the biggest legislative accomplishment of the Trump administration was nothing more than a boondoggle for the wealthiest class of Americans.