(CNN) โ President Donald Trump filled his first 100 days back in office with the same relentless lying and inaccuracy that was a hallmark of his first presidency and his 2016 and 2024 presidential campaigns.
Some of Trumpโs 2025 false claims were about consequential policy matters, others about trivial personal fixations. Some were sophisticated distortions about obscure subjects, others obvious fictions about issues average Americans experience in their daily lives. Many were ad-libbed or posted on social media, but many were scripted into prepared remarks.
Aside from the staggering frequency and the trademark brazenness, what stood out was how repetitive Trumpโs lying was. Though he regularly sprinkled in some fresh deception, he deployed a core batch of favored falsehoods again and again โ undeterred by the fact that many of these claims had been publicly debunked for months or even years.
Here is a list of 100 separate false claims from Trump since his inauguration on January 20, fact-checked concisely with hyperlinks to more information. This is not a comprehensive list of the presidentโs false claims during this period (there were well over 100 in all) or a count of how many total times he was inaccurate (he uttered many of these 100 claims over and over again).
Inflation
1. Falsely claimed in April that grocery prices โare downโ and โWAY DOWN.โ Grocery prices had continued to increase since he took office โ and the jump from February to March, about 0.49%, was the biggest one-month increase since October 2022.
2. Falsely claimed in April that โthe cost of eggs has come down like 93, 94% since we took office.โ The consumer price of eggs hit a record high in March, and while they might well have fallen in April, the decline certainly wasnโt 93% or 94%; wholesale egg prices had fallen roughly 52% since the week Trump took office.
3. Falsely claimed April 17 that gas prices had fallen to $1.98 per gallon in two states the day prior. In fact, no stateโs average gas price was below $2.70 per gallon the day prior, according to data from AAA โ and of the tens of thousands of individual stations tracked by the firm GasBuddy, not a single one was selling for under $2.19 per gallon that day.
4. Falsely claimed there was โno inflationโ during his first presidency. Inflation was relatively low, but it existed; prices roseโฏabout 8%โฏfrom the beginning of Trumpโs term to the end. And year-over-year inflation was 1.4% in the month he left office, January 2021.
5. Falsely claimed President Joe Bidenโs administration had the highest inflation โin the history of our country.โ Trump could have fairly said the year-over-year USโฏinflation rateโฏhit a 40-year high under Biden in June 2022, when it was 9.1%, but that was not close to the all-timeโฏrecordโฏofโฏ23.7%, set in 1920. Trumpโs claim was also wrong if he was claiming there was record cumulative inflation over the course of Bidenโs presidency. It was about 21%, compared to about 49% during President Jimmy Carterโs term.
6. Falsely claimed the price of bacon โquadrupledโ during Bidenโs presidency. Federal statistics show the average price of a pound of sliced bacon in December 2024, Bidenโs last full month in office, was up about 19% since January 2021, the month Biden was inaugurated; the average price in January 2025, Bidenโs last partial month in office, was up about 21% since January 2021. Neither was close to the 300% increase Trump claimed.
7. Falsely claimed the price of apples doubled during Bidenโs presidency. Federal statistics show the price of apples increased by about 7% between the month Biden was sworn in as president and December 2024; it was about an 8% increase between January 2021 and January 2025. Neither was close to the 100% increase Trump claimed.
Trade, the economy, taxes
8. Falsely claimed that, before he came back to office, โWe were losing $2 trillion a year on trade.โ The total US deficit in goods and services trade in 2024 was about $918 billion; if you count only goods trade and ignore the services trade at which the US excels, it was about $1.2 trillion, still far shy of Trumpโs figure. (And economists widely reject Trumpโs notion that a trade deficit, the difference between the value of US imports and exports in a given year, is a loss.)
9. Falsely claimed in early April that the US was already taking in $2 billion, $3 billion, or even $3.5 billion per day in tariff revenue. The actual figure was in the hundreds of millions at most, not $2 billion, and itโs important to note that US importers, not foreign exporters, pay the tariff revenue.
10. Falsely claimed the US has a โ$350 billionโ trade deficit with Mexico. Federal statistics show the 2024 deficit with Mexico in goods and services trade was about $179 billion; it was about $182 billion in goods trade alone.
11. Falsely claimed, after an interviewer reminded him that not a single tariff deal with another country had been announced yet, โIโve made 200 deals.โ He simply had not done so, and his supposed explanation for this assertion โ โThe deal is a deal that I chooseโฆWe are a department store, and we set the priceโ โ did not substantiate it.
12. Falsely claimed, while touting the supposed benefits of tariffs, that Honda โjust announcedโ it is building โa really big plant in Indiana.โ Honda subsequently told CNN: โHonda did not announce plans for a new plant in the U.S. at this time.โ Reuters, citing anonymous sources, had reported that Honda was planning to build its next-generation Civic hybrid in Indiana rather than Mexico as originally planned, but the report did not say Honda was building a new factory.
13. Falsely claimed โthe United States was proportionately the wealthiest it has ever beenโ from 1789 to 1913, when tariffs made up a higher percentage of federal revenue, and that 1870 to 1913, before the reintroduction of the federal income tax, was โthe richest period in the history of the United States, relatively speaking.โ Trump didnโt explain what he meant by โproportionately the wealthiestโ or โthe richestโฆrelatively speaking,โ but economists say that by any standard measure, the US is far wealthier today than it was in the early 20th century and prior; per capita gross domestic product isโฏnow many times higherโฏthan it was then.
14. Falsely claimed he signed โthe largest tax cut in historyโ during his first presidency. Expert analyses have foundโฏhis 2017 tax cut law was not the largest in US history, either in percentage of gross domestic product or in inflation-adjusted dollars.
Ukraine and Russia
15. Falsely claimed Ukraine started the war with Russia, saying, โYou shouldโve never started it. You couldโve made a deal.โ Russia started the war, annexing Ukraineโs Crimea region in 2014 and then launching a full-scale invasion in 2022.
16. Falsely claimed the US had provided โ$350 billionโ in wartime aid to Ukraine. There is no basis for this figure. According to the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, a German think tank that closely tracks wartime aid to Ukraine, the US had committed about $135 billion in wartime military, financial and humanitarian aid to Ukraine through February 2025 (at current exchange rates) and actually allocated about $130 billion of that sum.
17. Falsely claimed Europe had provided $200 billion less in aid to Ukraine than the US had. In fact, the Kiel Institute data shows that Europe โ the European Union plus individual European countries โ had committed and allocated more total wartime military, financial and humanitarian aid to Ukraine than the US had through February; in aid allocated, it was about $157 billion for Europe to about $135 billion for the US.
18. Falsely claimed he was clearly speaking โin jestโ when he said during his 2024 campaign that he would end the war in Ukraine by โday oneโ of this presidency. Trump made the pledge at least 53 times in 2023 and 2024 in an entirely serious context and tone, often declaring he would end the war even before his inauguration.
19. Falsely claimed in February that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was โdown at 4% approval rating.โ An approval survey conducted from late November to early January found 63% of Ukrainians either approved fully or tended to approve of Zelenskyโs actions as president; another survey, conducted in February, found that 57% of Ukrainians said they trusted Zelensky.
20. Falsely claimed Zelensky admitted โhalf of the money we sent him is โMISSING.โโ Zelensky had made no such admission; rather, he had taken issue with inflated claims about how much US cash Ukraine had received, saying he doesnโt know where all the professed additional money has gone and that perhaps these higher figures are correct โon paper,โ according to a translation by the news outlet Ukrainska Pravda.
21. Falsely claimed in mid-March that โAT THIS VERY MOMENT, THOUSANDS OF UKRAINIAN TROOPS ARE COMPLETELY SURROUNDED BY THE RUSSIAN MILITARY.โ There was no encirclement of thousands of Ukrainian troops at the time, according to Ukrainian leaders, independent analysts, journalists, and, Reuters reported, US intelligence.
22. Falsely claimed that after Democratic senator and former House member Adam Schiff made up an account of Trumpโs controversial 2019 phone call with Zelensky, โthey found out that there was a tape of the conversation.โ There is still no known US recording of that Trump-Zelensky conversation; the Schiff comments Trump was criticizing were exaggerations of a rough written transcript of the call, which was released before Schiff delivered his rendition of it.
23. Falsely claimed Russiaโs Nord Stream 2 pipeline โwas deadโ when he left office in January 2021 because he had โstopped it.โ It wasnโt dead. Trump signed sanctions related to the project into law in December 2019, when the pipeline was already about 90% complete, and the state-owned Russian company behind the projectโฏannouncedโฏin December 2020, the month before Trump left office, that construction was resuming.
Immigration
24. Falsely claimed the US is the only country that grants birthright citizenship. Dozens of other countries, including Canada and Mexico, also grant automatic citizenship to people born on their soil.
25. Falsely claimed he had โ571 miles of border wallโโฏconstructed during his first presidency. Federal statistics show 458 miles were built during those four years. (And the majority of them replaced previous barriers, though Trumpโs replacement barriers were generally much more formidable.)
26. Falsely claimed โI completed the wall, what I was doing,โ but then had wanted to build โan extensionโ before Biden halted construction. Trumpโs phrasing here was a bit confusing, but he did not complete the wall. The 458 miles of construction fell far short of the 1,000 miles he campaigned on building, and when he left office, there were about 280 miles where wall construction had been planned but not executed.
27. Falsely claimed that his first full month back in office in 2025 had โthe lowest level of illegal border crossings ever recorded.โ It was the lowest number recorded since the early 1960s, but not the lowest โever recorded.โ
28. Falsely claimed that, as shown on a chart he frequently displayed at rallies, the US had the lowest level of illegal immigration ever when he left office in January 2021. In fact, the spot that the chart deceptively highlights as a historic low point was April 2020, when Trump still had more than eight months left in his term and when global migration had slowed to a trickle because of the Covid-19 pandemic. After hitting a roughly three-year low (not an all-time low) in April 2020, migration numbers at the southern border increased each month through the end of Trumpโs first term.
29. Falsely claimed โ21 millionโ migrants were allowed into the country by the Biden administration, โnot even including the gotawaysโ who evaded detection. Through December 2024, the last full month under Biden, the country hadโฏrecordedโฏunder 11 million nationwide โencountersโ with migrants during that administration, including millions who were rapidly expelled from the country. Even adding in so-called gotaways who evaded detection,โฏestimatedโฏby House Republicans as being roughly 2.2 million, thereโs no way the total is 21 million.
30. Falsely claimed foreign leaders โall over the worldโ emptied their jails and mental health facilities to somehow โdumpโ people from those facilities into the US as migrants during the Biden administration โ adding that in โsome countriesโ it was โa complete emptying of their prison system.โ Trump and his allies have never provided proof that this happened in any country, let alone in many countries as he has claimed, and an expert on prison systems around the world said she knows of nothing like it.
31. Falsely claimed former Vice President Harris was the Biden administrationโs โborder czar.โ Inโฏreality, the White House always rejected that label; Bidenโฏgave Harris a more limited immigration-related assignment in 2021, asking her to lead diplomacy withโฏEl Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras in an attempt to address the conditions that prompted their citizens to try to migrate to the US.
32. Falsely claimed he โcame up withโ the term โcaravanโ in reference to migrants. He didnโt, as CNN and others noted when he previously claimed to have coined the phrase.
Foreign affairs
33. Falsely claimed he thwarted a plan from the Biden administration to spend $50 million on condoms for Hamas in Gaza, then falsely claimed it was $100 million. The tale was fictional at either figure. When Trump ally Elon Musk was challenged about the claim after it was debunked, Musk conceded that โsome of the things that I say will be incorrect, and should be corrected.โ
34. Falsely claimed of hostages in Gaza: โBiden got none back, by the way, just so you understand: none, zero.โ Leaving aside the question of who deserves more credit for the ceasefire-for-hostages deal secured by representatives of both Trump and Biden in the final days of Bidenโs presidency, Hamas released 105 hostages during a brief 2023 truce brokered in part by the Biden administration about a year before Trumpโs election victory.
35. Falsely claimed there was โpeace all over the worldโ when he left office in 2021. There were dozens of active armed conflicts at the time.
36. Falsely claimed of South Koreaโs cost-sharing payments related to the US military presence in that country: โThey began these Military payments during my first term.โ In fact, the cost-sharing deals with South Korea began in 1991.
37. Falsely claimed Biden โterminated the dealโ with South Korea. In fact, Trumpโs cost-sharing deals with South Korea had expired by the time he left office, and Biden proceeded to make new ones in 2021 and 2024 – both of which included South Korean spending increases.
38. Falsely claimed the US has a deal to defend Japan in which โwe pay all the money; they donโt pay anything.โ Japan provides billions of dollars per year in support for the US military presence in the country.
39. Falsely claimed, โNATO was gone until I came along.โ Experts on NATO say there is simply no basis for his assertion that the alliance was vanishing before he took office.
40. Falsely claimed Iran was so โbrokeโ during his first presidency that โthey werenโt giving any money to Hamas or Hezbollah.โ Trumpโs own administration acknowledged in the last year of that presidency that Iran was continuing to fund terror groups including Hezbollah. The funding did decline in the second half of the term, when the Iranian economy struggled because of Trumpโs sanctions, but the cash for Hamas and Hezbollah never ceased during that presidency, four experts told CNN in 2024.
41. Falsely claimed he โgot rid ofโ the ISIS terror group in just โthree weeksโโฏeven though โpeopleโ had told him it would take five years. The so-called ISIS โcaliphateโ was declared fully liberatedโฏmore than two yearsโฏinto Trumpโs presidency, and the group continues to operate today.
42. Falsely claimed the US left โtens of billions of dollars worthโ of military equipment to the Taliban when Biden pulled US troops out of the country in 2021. The Defense Department has estimated that this equipment surrendered by the Afghan forces had been worth about $7.1 billion โ a chunk of the roughly $18.6 billion worth of equipment provided to the Afghan forces between 2005 and 2021.
43. Falsely claimed โ38,000 people died, from our country, building the Panama Canal.โ Experts say that figure is not close to accurate. While the century-old records are imprecise, they show about 5,600 people died during the canalโs American construction phase between 1903 and 1914 and that the vast majority of those people were from the Caribbean. The late historian David McCullough found that โthe number of white Americans who died was about 350.โ
China
44. Falsely claimed that โwe have a deficit with China of over $1 trillion.โ Federal statistics show the 2024 trade deficit with China in goods and services trade was about $263 billion. Even if you count only trade in goods, the 2024 deficit with China was about $295 billion, still not close to Trumpโs figure.
45. Falsely claimed Biden is responsible for the trade deficit with China supposedly worsening to more than $1 trillion, saying Biden let it โget out of hand.โ In fact, the 2024 deficit of about $263 billion was lower than the deficit in every year of Trumpโs first presidency.
46. Falsely claimed the US took in โhundreds of billions of dollars from Chinaโ โ that โthey paidโ โ because of the tariffs he imposed during his first presidency. US importers, not foreign exporters like China, make the tariff payments, and study after study has found that Americans bore the overwhelming majority of the costs.
47. Falsely claimed no previous president had taken in even โ10 centsโ in revenue from tariffs on China. The US has generated revenue from tariffs on imports from China since 1789, and it was generating billions per year from such tariffs during the Obama administration.
48. Falsely claimed, โAbove all, China is operating the Panama Canal.โ It isnโt; Panama is. Trump could have raised legitimate questions about Chinaโs influence in the canal area, but โoperating the canalโ went too far.
49. Falsely claimed that during his first presidency, he successfully pressured China into completely ceasing its purchases of oil from Iran. Chinaโs oil imports from Iran did briefly plummet under Trump in 2019, the year the Trump administration made a concerted effort to deter such purchases, but they never stopped โ and then they rose sharply again, up to hundreds of thousands of barrels per day, while Trump was still president.
Europe
50. Falsely claimed Europe doesnโt โtake anythingโ sold by the US. While the European Union certainly has some trade barriers that impede the sale of US products there, federal statistics show the EU bought about $649 billion worthโฏof US exports in 2024 โ very far from nothing.
51. Falsely claimed, of Europe, that โthey donโt take our farm products.โ The US government says the EU was the fourth-largest export market for US agricultural exports in 2024, buying a record $12.8 billion worth, despite some agricultural trade barriers.
52. Falsely claimed the US has a trade deficit with the EU of โ$350 billion.โ Federal statistics show the 2024 deficit with the EU in goods and services trade was about $161 billion; it was about $237 billion in goods trade alone.
53. Falsely claimed of the EU, โThey donโt take our cars,โ adding that โwe donโt have a car thatโs been sold to the European Union.โ According to a March 2025 report from the European Automobile Manufacturersโ Association, โ164,857 US-made cars were exported to the EU in 2024,โ valued at about $8.8 billion at current exchange rates. Some of these are vehicles made by European automakers at plants in the US, and while US automakers have often struggled to gain popularity in Europe, itโs not true the EU categorically rejects US-made vehicles.
54. Falsely claimed the EU has a trade barrier that makes it impossible to sell US cars there โ a test in which โthey drop a bowling ball on the top of your car from 20 feet up in the air, and if thereโs a little dent, they say, โNo, Iโm sorry, your car doesnโt qualify.โโ There is no EU car safety test involving bowling balls and no requirement for cars to not experience even minor damage when a large object strikes them.
55. Falsely claimed the EU was โformed for the purpose of taking advantage of the United States.โ Experts on the history of the EU have told CNN such claims are โpreposterousโ and โcould not be more wrong or inaccurate,โ noting US presidents consistently supported European integration efforts that were intended to stabilize the continent and promote prosperity.
Canada
56. Falsely claimed Canada imposes low tariffs on merely โthe first little carton of milkโ exported by the US, but then US exports get hit with tariffs โup to 275, 300%.โ In reality, in Trumpโs US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), Canada guaranteed that tens of thousands of metric tons of imported US milk per year, not merely a single carton, will face no tariffs at all โ and the US is not even close to hitting its tariff-free milk quota, so US exports arenโt being hit with the high tariffs at all.
57. Falsely claimed he had Canadaโs dairy-tariff situation โwell taken care ofโ at the time he left office the first time, โbut under Biden, they just kept raising it.โ In fact, Canada did not raise its dairy tariffs during the Biden administration; the tariffs Trump is denouncing were left in place by his own USMCA.
58. Falsely claimed the US has a $200 billion trade deficit with Canada. Federal statistics show the 2024 deficit with Canada in goods and services trade was about $36 billion; it was about $71 billion in goods trade alone.
59. Falsely claimed Canada is โONE OF THE HIGHEST TARIFFING NATIONS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD.โ Canada is a relatively low-tariff country on the whole, just 102nd-highest on a World Bank list of 137 countriesโ trade-weighted average tariff rates in 2022 โ and had a lower average (1.37%) than the US (1.49%) that year, the most recent for which data is available. (During this Trump presidency, Canada has announced new retaliatory tariffs on the US in direct response to Trumpโs own new tariffs on Canada.)
60. Falsely claimed, of Canada, that โthey donโt take our agricultural product for the most partโ; he mentioned dairy, then said, โA little bit they do, but not much.โ This is false even with Trumpโs qualifiers. Canada was the worldโs second-largest buyer of US agricultural exports in 2024, according to the US Department of Agriculture, purchasing about $28.4 billion worth. While Canada does limit foreign access to its dairy, egg and poultry markets in particular, the USDA notes on its website that โalmost allโ US agricultural exports to Canada face zero tariffs or quotas.
61. Falsely claimed Canada prohibits US banks. US banks have been operating in Canada for well over a century, and well-known US banks like Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and US Bank operate there today. While Canadaโs tight regulations have discouraged many foreign banks from opening retail branches in particular, Canada does not forbid the presence of foreign banks.
Environment and energy
62. Falsely claimed people concerned about climate change say โthe ocean is going to rise one-eighth of an inch in the next 300 years.โ The global average sea level is rising more per year than Trump claimed these โclimate lunaticsโ say it will rise over 300 years; NASA reported in 2024 that the global average sea level rose about 0.3 inches from 2022 to 2023.
63. Falsely claimed the January wildfires in Los Angeles happened as a result of Californiaโs Democratic leaders refusing to send the city sufficient water โbecause they were protecting a smelt,โ an obscure fish species in Northern California. Experts on California water policy have explained that efforts to protect the smelt had nothing to do with the fires and did not impede the firefighting effort.
64. Falsely claimed โI broke into Los Angelesโ and โI invaded Los Angelesโ to provide the city with much-needed water, in late January and early February, โand the water is now flowing down.โ The 2 billion-plus gallons of water Trump had released from two dams in Californiaโs Central Valley agricultural hub did not actually go to Los Angeles; the water was directed to a dry lake basin elsewhere in the Central Valley โ more than 100 miles north of Los Angeles.
65. Falsely claimed some of Californiaโs water flows down from Canada. It doesnโt; the Columbia River that begins in Canada flows into the Pacific in Oregon.
66. Falsely claimed the Paris climate agreement cost the US โtrillions of dollars that other countries were not paying.โ The US has never spent or committed anywhere close to trillions of dollars in connection to the accord; Biden pledged to pay $11.4 billion per year toward international climate financing upon taking office, but Congress appropriated less than even that.
67. Falsely claimed Biden imposed a mandate โwhere everybody has to have an electric car.โ Biden did make a legislative and regulatory push to get automakers to reduce emissions and adopt electric vehicles, but there was never a mandate requiring American consumers to have electric cars; the tailpipe rules for automakers the Biden administration unveiled in 2024 aimed to have electric vehicles make up 35% to 56% new vehicles sold in 2032.
68. Falsely claimed the Biden administration โended up spending $9 billion on eightโ charging stations for electric cars. That didnโt happen. As FactCheck.org and others have noted, Trump was distorting news articles about the slow pace at which $7.5 billion in federal funds allocated for electric charging have been spent. The articles reported that, as of March 2024, only eight charging stations had been built under the program; the articles did not say that these stations had themselves cost the entire $7.5 billion, let alone $9 billion.
69. Falsely claimed โtheyโre opening up coal plants all over Germany.โ Germany closed 18 coal plants in 2024, its government told The Associated Press, and is not opening any new ones; the country has formally committed to phasing out coal by 2038 at the latest. It is true that Germany temporarily revived some idled coal plants after Russia slashed natural gas exports following its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, but those plants were taken offline again in 2024.
Gender, health, education, media
70. Falsely claimed two gold medalists in womenโs boxing at the Olympics in Paris last year were men who โtransitioned.โ Neither champion had transitioned; as the International Olympic Committee noted, both were born as female, raised as female and have always competed in womenโs events. Even the discredited boxing authority that controversially disqualified the women from a 2023 competition, vaguely claiming a test had found they had unfair competitive advantages, did not allege they had transitioned.
71. Falsely claimed โ20 years ago, Autism in children was 1 in 10,000,โ much rarer than todayโs prevalence of about 1 in 31 children. Public statistics from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that the prevalence of autism in 2004 was 1 in 125 children.
72. Falsely claimed that โwe lose 300,000 people a year to fentanyl, not 100 (thousand), not 95 (thousand), not 60 (thousand) like you read.โ There is no basis for Trumpโs โ300,000โ figure; the US has never had 100,000 reported deaths involving synthetic opioids like fentanyl in a 12-month period, let alone 300,000, and while experts say there may well be an undercount, it is not nearly as high as Trump said.
73. Falsely claimed the US ranks dead last, 40th out of 40 countries, in international education rankings. The White House couldnโt identify any education rankings where the US ranked 40th out of 40 countries; FactCheck.org and PolitiFact have noted that even among the wealthy, developed countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, the US ranks well above average in reading and science and below average but still far from last in math.
74. Falsely claimed that while Democratic governors closed schools during the Covid-19 pandemic, some governors โkept them open 100% of the time,โ adding, โSouth Carolina did. Tennessee did.โ The Republican governor of South Carolina ordered school closures in 2020, while the Republican governor of Tennessee recommended school closures that year (and the stateโs school districts complied).
75. Falsely claimed, while alleging that CNN and MSNBC cover him too negatively, that โwhat they do is illegal.โ It is not.
Elections and Trumpโs popularity
76. Falsely claimed the 2020 election was โtotally rigged.โ There is no basis for the claim. Trump lost a legitimate election to Biden.
77. Falsely claimed Democrats โtriedโ to โrigโ the 2024 election he won. There is no basis for this claim, either.
78. Falsely claimed his 2020 vote total, โalmost 75 million votes,โ was incorrect. The votes were counted and reported accurately, and Trumpโs vote total โ about 74.2 million โ is his actual total.
79. Falsely claimed โBiden didnโt get 80 million votesโ in 2020. Biden did; in fact, he got 81,283,501 votes.
80. Falsely claimed he got โmuch more than 80 million votesโ in the 2024 election. Trump received about 77.3 million votes.
81. Falsely claimed his 2024 vote total is โactually much more thanโ the reported total, since unspecified people โcheated like hell.โ Trumpโs official vote total is his actual vote total, and there is no evidence of cheating by vote counters or by his Democratic foes.
82. Falsely claimed he won Wisconsin โthree times.โ He won it twice, in 2016 and 2024, but lost it in 2020.
83. Falsely claimed, โWeโre the only country in the world that has mail-in voting.โ Various other countries, including Canada, Germany, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and Spain, allow some or all voters to vote by mail, though the specifics of their policies vary.
84. Falsely claimed a commission chaired by Democratic former President Jimmy Carter concluded that โif you have mail-in voting, youโre going to have massive fraud.โ Though the commission Carter co-chaired in 2005 was generally skeptical of mail-in voting, saying absentee ballots were โthe largest source of potential voter fraud,โ it didnโt say massive fraud was inevitable with mail-in voting; in fact, it highlighted an example of successful all-mail elections, in Oregon, and offered recommendations for making the use of mail-in ballots more secure.
85. Falsely described the Biden administration as election cheaters, saying that โthe only thing theyโre good at, really, is cheatingโ and that โanybody that cheats that much and that well is not stupid.โ This is nonsense.
86. Falsely claimed in a February 11 social media post that โCalifornia just stopped counting their votes on the 2024 Presidential Election.โ While California does take notably long to finish its vote counts, its elections chief certified the 2024 presidential election results on December 13, nearly two months prior to Trumpโs post, and individual California counties certified their own presidential results on December 3.
87. Falsely claimed on February 21, while speaking about California and the presidential election, that โthey were voting a week and a half ago.โ Nobody anywhere in the country was still voting in the November 2024 presidential election in February 2025.
88. Falsely claimed โI won youth by 36 pointsโ in the 2024 election. He didnโt say how he was defining โyouth,โ but the claim that Trump won youth by 36 points is clearly false; CNN exit polls showed Harris beat him among voters ages 18-24, 25-29 and 30-39. (There is an ongoing debate among experts about how exactly young people voted, but Trump certainly did not win them by 36 points.)
89. Falsely claimed his โpoll numbersโ are the highest โthat any Republican president has ever had.โ There was no reasonable basis for the claim; his approval rating, in the 40s and 50s at the time he made it, was not even close to the best of all time for a Republican president. President George W. Bush hit 92% shortly after the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, and President George H.W. Bush hit 89% at the end of the Gulf War in 1991.
90. Falsely claimed, while talking about the 2024 campaign, โWe never had empty seats, itโs amazing.โ There were empty seats at numerous Trump rallies in 2024, including one where he made the boast that โwe never have an empty seat.โ
91. Falsely claimed that when he was hours late to a 2024 rally in Michigan because he was taping a podcast interview with Joe Rogan, โNot a person leftโฆnot a person left.โ Videos from the rally showed people leaving before Trump arrived; reporters from CNN and other outlets estimated that hundreds of people left.
The January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol
92. Falsely claimed the perpetrators of the Capitol riot โdidnโt assault.โ They did, as video after video and trial after trial made clear. The Justice Department has said more than 140 officers were assaulted on January 6 and that more than 170 people pleaded guilty to such assaults.
93. Falsely claimed the January 6 rioters โhad no guns.โ Multiple rioters were armed with guns.
94. Falsely claimed rioter Ashli Babbitt โwas innocently standing there, they even say trying to sort of hold back the crowd,โ when she was shot by a Capitol Police officer. Video evidence shows Babbitt was shot as she was trying to climb through a broken window to the Speakerโs Lobby outside the House of Representatives.
95. Falsely claimed the House select committee that investigated the attack on the Capitol โdeleted and destroyed all of the information that they collected.โ The committee preserved a large volume of evidence, though there has been a long-running dispute between Republicans and Democrats over the preservation of certain committee records.
96. Falsely claimed Democratic former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is โon tapeโ admitting that she had rejected his offer of 10,000 National Guard troops to protect the Capitol on January 6, 2021. There is no evidence Pelosi turned down or even received such an offer, and she has repeatedly rejected, not confirmed, Trumpโs story about what happened. Pelosi was recorded by her daughter expressing frustration with Capitol security that day and saying, โI take responsibility for not having them just prepare for moreโ โ not saying she had turned down a Trump offer of 10,000 troops or that, as Trump has also wrongly claimed, she was in charge of Capitol security.
Federal government
97. Falsely claimed Biden made a last-minute push before Trump returned to office to hire people with significant disabilities as air traffic controllers. The Federal Aviation Administration pilot program he was referring to was actually a years-old initiative launched during Trumpโs own administration in 2019.
98. Falsely claimed โmoney is being paid to manyโ of the more than 10 million people listed in the Social Security database as being 120 years old or older. Social Security already stops payments to people listed as being age 115 and older. As a government watchdog noted in a 2023 report and the Trump-appointed acting commissioner of the Social Security Administration noted in a February 2025 statement, someone not being marked as deceased in the database doesnโt mean theyโre actually receiving checks.
99. Falsely claimed that when a federal employee didnโt respond to the initial Elon Musk email blast asking them to list accomplishments from the previous week, โUsually that means that maybe that person doesnโt exist, or that person doesnโt want to say theyโre working for another company while being paid by the United States government.โ Thatโs not true; there were explanations for the early non-responses other than improper moonlighting or someone not existing while being paid as a federal employee. For one, leaders at multiple federal agencies had told their employees not to respond to the email.
100. Falsely described the special counsel investigation into Bidenโs handling of classified documents, saying Biden was โessentially found guiltyโ and adding that โnobody knows what the ruling was.โ Biden was not found guilty, โessentiallyโ or not, and there was no judicial โrulingโ at all; Biden was not even charged with a crime. The special counsel who was appointed to look into Bidenโs handling of classified documents, Robert Hur, wrote in a public report that โthe evidence does not establish Mr. Bidenโs guilt beyond a reasonable doubtโ and that โseveral defenses are likely to create reasonable doubt as to such charges.โ
