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Trump’s ‘Four Pinocchio’ Tax Claim
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Jan 13, 2020 20:16:31   #
rumitoid
 
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerated, unsupported and misleading claims. The Washington Post’s most recent tally of such statements topped more than 15,400 over Trump’s first 1,055 days in office, with the rate of falsehoods accelerating rapidly.

The Post’s fact checker, Glenn Kessler, added one more to the list Monday, highlighting a recent Trump claim about his tax cuts that might have slipped under the radar amid growing questions about the administration’s shifting rationales for k*****g Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.

The claim: In a radio interview with Rush Limbaugh last Monday, Trump said, “[W]e're actually taking in more revenue now than we did when we had the higher taxes because the economy's doing so well.”
The fact check: Kessler awards this one Four Pinocchios, the rating designation reserved for the biggest whoppers. “The way the federal budget works is often a mystery to Americans. But it shouldn’t be to the president of the United States,” he writes.

The explanation: Yes, the government’s nominal revenues have gone up, but they were projected to rise before the tax cuts. “Inflation and population growth over time raise the cost of programs, while even a slowly growing economy will result in more taxes being collected,” Kessler explains. But revenue has fallen significantly from what was projected before the tax cuts went into effect, a key factor driving the deficit higher.

An analysis done for the Post by Richard Kogan, a former White House budget official who is now senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, finds that, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, revenues rose by an annual average of 3.5% over fiscal years 2009 through 2017.

From fiscal 2017 through 2025, revenues are projected to rise by an average 1.4% a year. The economy, meanwhile, is expected to grow at roughly the same rate over time: 1.3% a year, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, compared to 1.4% annual growth from 2009 through 2017.

“Trump gets virtually everything wrong in his framing of this factoid: Revenue has not increased because of the tax cut or because of the economy,” Kessler concludes. “If anything, revenue estimates have slightly declined for 2019 and 2020 since the passage of the tax cut. And revenue growth is sharply down in the period after the tax cut, compared with the period before it.”

The bottom line: Kessler somewhat generously suggests that the president needs to brush up on budget policy. But given that Trump still falsely claims — as he did again in the Limbaugh interview — that his tax cut was the biggest in U.S. history, it’s hard to imagine that some tax and budget tutorials would prevent the president from repeating assertions he thinks will benefit him politically.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/trump-four-pinocchio-tax-claim-233244070.html

Reply
Jan 13, 2020 20:17:55   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
rumitoid wrote:
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerated, unsupported and misleading claims. The Washington Post’s most recent tally of such statements topped more than 15,400 over Trump’s first 1,055 days in office, with the rate of falsehoods accelerating rapidly.

The Post’s fact checker, Glenn Kessler, added one more to the list Monday, highlighting a recent Trump claim about his tax cuts that might have slipped under the radar amid growing questions about the administration’s shifting rationales for k*****g Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.

The claim: In a radio interview with Rush Limbaugh last Monday, Trump said, “[W]e're actually taking in more revenue now than we did when we had the higher taxes because the economy's doing so well.”
The fact check: Kessler awards this one Four Pinocchios, the rating designation reserved for the biggest whoppers. “The way the federal budget works is often a mystery to Americans. But it shouldn’t be to the president of the United States,” he writes.

The explanation: Yes, the government’s nominal revenues have gone up, but they were projected to rise before the tax cuts. “Inflation and population growth over time raise the cost of programs, while even a slowly growing economy will result in more taxes being collected,” Kessler explains. But revenue has fallen significantly from what was projected before the tax cuts went into effect, a key factor driving the deficit higher.

An analysis done for the Post by Richard Kogan, a former White House budget official who is now senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, finds that, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, revenues rose by an annual average of 3.5% over fiscal years 2009 through 2017.

From fiscal 2017 through 2025, revenues are projected to rise by an average 1.4% a year. The economy, meanwhile, is expected to grow at roughly the same rate over time: 1.3% a year, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, compared to 1.4% annual growth from 2009 through 2017.

“Trump gets virtually everything wrong in his framing of this factoid: Revenue has not increased because of the tax cut or because of the economy,” Kessler concludes. “If anything, revenue estimates have slightly declined for 2019 and 2020 since the passage of the tax cut. And revenue growth is sharply down in the period after the tax cut, compared with the period before it.”

The bottom line: Kessler somewhat generously suggests that the president needs to brush up on budget policy. But given that Trump still falsely claims — as he did again in the Limbaugh interview — that his tax cut was the biggest in U.S. history, it’s hard to imagine that some tax and budget tutorials would prevent the president from repeating assertions he thinks will benefit him politically.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/trump-four-pinocchio-tax-claim-233244070.html
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerate... (show quote)


Impeach him

Reply
Jan 13, 2020 20:27:05   #
Liberty Tree
 
rumitoid wrote:
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerated, unsupported and misleading claims. The Washington Post’s most recent tally of such statements topped more than 15,400 over Trump’s first 1,055 days in office, with the rate of falsehoods accelerating rapidly.

The Post’s fact checker, Glenn Kessler, added one more to the list Monday, highlighting a recent Trump claim about his tax cuts that might have slipped under the radar amid growing questions about the administration’s shifting rationales for k*****g Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.

The claim: In a radio interview with Rush Limbaugh last Monday, Trump said, “[W]e're actually taking in more revenue now than we did when we had the higher taxes because the economy's doing so well.”
The fact check: Kessler awards this one Four Pinocchios, the rating designation reserved for the biggest whoppers. “The way the federal budget works is often a mystery to Americans. But it shouldn’t be to the president of the United States,” he writes.

The explanation: Yes, the government’s nominal revenues have gone up, but they were projected to rise before the tax cuts. “Inflation and population growth over time raise the cost of programs, while even a slowly growing economy will result in more taxes being collected,” Kessler explains. But revenue has fallen significantly from what was projected before the tax cuts went into effect, a key factor driving the deficit higher.

An analysis done for the Post by Richard Kogan, a former White House budget official who is now senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, finds that, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, revenues rose by an annual average of 3.5% over fiscal years 2009 through 2017.

From fiscal 2017 through 2025, revenues are projected to rise by an average 1.4% a year. The economy, meanwhile, is expected to grow at roughly the same rate over time: 1.3% a year, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, compared to 1.4% annual growth from 2009 through 2017.

“Trump gets virtually everything wrong in his framing of this factoid: Revenue has not increased because of the tax cut or because of the economy,” Kessler concludes. “If anything, revenue estimates have slightly declined for 2019 and 2020 since the passage of the tax cut. And revenue growth is sharply down in the period after the tax cut, compared with the period before it.”

The bottom line: Kessler somewhat generously suggests that the president needs to brush up on budget policy. But given that Trump still falsely claims — as he did again in the Limbaugh interview — that his tax cut was the biggest in U.S. history, it’s hard to imagine that some tax and budget tutorials would prevent the president from repeating assertions he thinks will benefit him politically.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/trump-four-pinocchio-tax-claim-233244070.html
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerate... (show quote)


Since the WP has no credibility and is a liberal spinmeister it does not matter.

Reply
 
 
Jan 13, 2020 20:35:08   #
TexaCan Loc: Homeward Bound!
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Impeach him


Again!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

Reply
Jan 13, 2020 20:38:12   #
TexaCan Loc: Homeward Bound!
 
rumitoid wrote:
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerated, unsupported and misleading claims. The Washington Post’s most recent tally of such statements topped more than 15,400 over Trump’s first 1,055 days in office, with the rate of falsehoods accelerating rapidly.

The Post’s fact checker, Glenn Kessler, added one more to the list Monday, highlighting a recent Trump claim about his tax cuts that might have slipped under the radar amid growing questions about the administration’s shifting rationales for k*****g Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.

The claim: In a radio interview with Rush Limbaugh last Monday, Trump said, “[W]e're actually taking in more revenue now than we did when we had the higher taxes because the economy's doing so well.”
The fact check: Kessler awards this one Four Pinocchios, the rating designation reserved for the biggest whoppers. “The way the federal budget works is often a mystery to Americans. But it shouldn’t be to the president of the United States,” he writes.

The explanation: Yes, the government’s nominal revenues have gone up, but they were projected to rise before the tax cuts. “Inflation and population growth over time raise the cost of programs, while even a slowly growing economy will result in more taxes being collected,” Kessler explains. But revenue has fallen significantly from what was projected before the tax cuts went into effect, a key factor driving the deficit higher.

An analysis done for the Post by Richard Kogan, a former White House budget official who is now senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, finds that, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, revenues rose by an annual average of 3.5% over fiscal years 2009 through 2017.

From fiscal 2017 through 2025, revenues are projected to rise by an average 1.4% a year. The economy, meanwhile, is expected to grow at roughly the same rate over time: 1.3% a year, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, compared to 1.4% annual growth from 2009 through 2017.

“Trump gets virtually everything wrong in his framing of this factoid: Revenue has not increased because of the tax cut or because of the economy,” Kessler concludes. “If anything, revenue estimates have slightly declined for 2019 and 2020 since the passage of the tax cut. And revenue growth is sharply down in the period after the tax cut, compared with the period before it.”

The bottom line: Kessler somewhat generously suggests that the president needs to brush up on budget policy. But given that Trump still falsely claims — as he did again in the Limbaugh interview — that his tax cut was the biggest in U.S. history, it’s hard to imagine that some tax and budget tutorials would prevent the president from repeating assertions he thinks will benefit him politically.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/trump-four-pinocchio-tax-claim-233244070.html
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerate... (show quote)



And yet the crowds still ROAR!😉

Reply
Jan 13, 2020 20:40:01   #
jeff smith
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Impeach him


NO!

Reply
Jan 13, 2020 20:56:31   #
Kevyn
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Impeach him


Just give him an enema and all that will remain is a blonde combover wigg and an orange garbage bag

Reply
 
 
Jan 13, 2020 21:17:39   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
TexaCan wrote:
Again!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂


He'll be the first doubly impeached POTUS...

And brag about it

Reply
Jan 13, 2020 21:18:38   #
Canuckus Deploracus Loc: North of the wall
 
Kevyn wrote:
Just give him an enema and all that will remain is a blonde combover wigg and an orange garbage bag


Apologies...

Isn't that a description of your avatar?

Can't remember the actor's name...

Reply
Jan 13, 2020 22:19:24   #
archie bunker Loc: Texas
 
rumitoid wrote:
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerated, unsupported and misleading claims. The Washington Post’s most recent tally of such statements topped more than 15,400 over Trump’s first 1,055 days in office, with the rate of falsehoods accelerating rapidly.

The Post’s fact checker, Glenn Kessler, added one more to the list Monday, highlighting a recent Trump claim about his tax cuts that might have slipped under the radar amid growing questions about the administration’s shifting rationales for k*****g Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.

The claim: In a radio interview with Rush Limbaugh last Monday, Trump said, “[W]e're actually taking in more revenue now than we did when we had the higher taxes because the economy's doing so well.”
The fact check: Kessler awards this one Four Pinocchios, the rating designation reserved for the biggest whoppers. “The way the federal budget works is often a mystery to Americans. But it shouldn’t be to the president of the United States,” he writes.

The explanation: Yes, the government’s nominal revenues have gone up, but they were projected to rise before the tax cuts. “Inflation and population growth over time raise the cost of programs, while even a slowly growing economy will result in more taxes being collected,” Kessler explains. But revenue has fallen significantly from what was projected before the tax cuts went into effect, a key factor driving the deficit higher.

An analysis done for the Post by Richard Kogan, a former White House budget official who is now senior fellow at the left-leaning Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, finds that, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, revenues rose by an annual average of 3.5% over fiscal years 2009 through 2017.

From fiscal 2017 through 2025, revenues are projected to rise by an average 1.4% a year. The economy, meanwhile, is expected to grow at roughly the same rate over time: 1.3% a year, after adjusting for population growth and inflation, compared to 1.4% annual growth from 2009 through 2017.

“Trump gets virtually everything wrong in his framing of this factoid: Revenue has not increased because of the tax cut or because of the economy,” Kessler concludes. “If anything, revenue estimates have slightly declined for 2019 and 2020 since the passage of the tax cut. And revenue growth is sharply down in the period after the tax cut, compared with the period before it.”

The bottom line: Kessler somewhat generously suggests that the president needs to brush up on budget policy. But given that Trump still falsely claims — as he did again in the Limbaugh interview — that his tax cut was the biggest in U.S. history, it’s hard to imagine that some tax and budget tutorials would prevent the president from repeating assertions he thinks will benefit him politically.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/trump-four-pinocchio-tax-claim-233244070.html
President Trump routinely lies or makes exaggerate... (show quote)


Projections? It was projected to?

You guys are all about projecting, aren't you.

Projections are meaningless. Real numbers aint.

Reply
Jan 14, 2020 03:28:29   #
rumitoid
 
Canuckus Deploracus wrote:
Impeach him


Lol, now why didn't I think of that?

Reply
 
 
Jan 14, 2020 03:32:29   #
rumitoid
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
Since the WP has no credibility and is a liberal spinmeister it does not matter.


Lol, everything that does not agree with Conservative Media handlers, without questioning or probing the validity, is spin. Think for yourself. Earnestly seek the t***h at any cost. Sorry, two very stupid and betrayal of the party ideas. Forget I mentioned them.

Reply
Jan 14, 2020 03:35:16   #
rumitoid
 
archie bunker wrote:
Projections? It was projected to?

You guys are all about projecting, aren't you.

Projections are meaningless. Real numbers aint.


Do you mean t***sference? Hey, this ain't no party, this ain't no disco, this ain't no fooling around. Dance or get off the pot. Wait! All we need is love.

Reply
Jan 14, 2020 03:36:22   #
rumitoid
 
TexaCan wrote:
Again!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂


Like Roman citizens for the gladiators. Is that good?

Reply
Jan 26, 2020 22:42:27   #
jeff smith
 
rumitoid wrote:
Lol, everything that does not agree with Conservative Media handlers, without questioning or probing the validity, is spin. Think for yourself. Earnestly seek the t***h at any cost. Sorry, two very stupid and betrayal of the party ideas. Forget I mentioned them.


rumitoid , every thing you have on here is contrary to reality . you seem to be under the OLD belief that the dem. party is still working for the working people of America . SORRY , that aint been true for a long time now . just look at the states that they have had control over for quit some time , like calif. n.y. and ill. isn't far behind . over taxed under employed , homeless al over . how can you think that they are still good for this country ?

Reply
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