Fact-Checking Trump’s False Claims in His First 100 Days in Office

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The president’s dizzying efforts to reconfigure the global economy, reshape the federal government and restrict immigration have been undergirded by a nonstop distortion of facts.

President Trump at the airport in Morristown, N.J., on Sunday.Credit...Eric Lee/The New York Times

By Linda Qiu

Videos by Jamie Leventhal

Reporting from Washington

April 29, 2025, 10:00 a.m. ET

President Trump, intent on enacting an expansive agenda, has moved at a dizzying pace in the first 100 days of his term, issuing a barrage of executive actions and seeking to expand the scope of his presidential power.

Underlying those efforts is a nonstop distortion of basic facts as Mr. Trump has sought to reconfigure the global economy, reshape the federal government and restrict immigration.

To justify his executive actions and policies, Mr. Trump has relied on false, misleading and hyperbolic claims, deflecting blame for catastrophes, boasting about purported achievements and trying to seek leverage with Ukraine in negotiating a peace deal with Russia.

Here is a fact-check of Mr. Trump’s often-repeated claims.

In his breakneck effort to transform the federal bureaucracy, Mr. Trump has offered misleading justifications. He has often echoed dubious claims about so-called fraud made by Elon Musk, the billionaire leading the cost-cutting initiative known as the Department of Government Efficiency.

What Was Said

“Could you mention some of the things that your team has found, some of the crazy numbers, including the woman that walked away with about $30 million?”
— in a February appearance with Mr. Musk


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