During a Friday speech about the September jobs report, President Joe Biden delivered a rapid-fire series of three false or misleading claims โ falsely saying that he has cut the debt, falsely crediting a tax policy that didnโt take effect until 2023 for improving the budget situation in 2021 and 2022, and misleadingly saying that he has presided over an โactual surplus.โ
At a separate moment of the speech, Biden used outdated figures to boast of setting record lows in the unemployment rates for African Americans, Hispanics and people with disabilities. While the rates for these three groups hit record lows earlier in his presidency, he didnโt acknowledge that they have all since increased to non-record levels โ and, in fact, are now higher than they were during parts of Donald Trumpโs presidency.
Hereโs a fact check.
Biden said in the Friday speech that Republicans want to โcut taxes for the very wealthy and big corporations,โ which would add to the deficit. Thatโs fair game.
But then he added: โI was able to cut the federal debt by $1.7 trillion over the first two-and-a โ two years. Well remember what we talked about. Those 50 corporations that made $40 billion, werenโt paying a penny in taxes? Well guess what โ we made them pay 30%. Uh, 15% in taxes โ 15%. Nowhere near what they should pay. And guess what? We were able to pay for everything, and we end up with an actual surplus.โ
Facts First: Bidenโs claims were thoroughly inaccurate. First, he has not cut the federal debt, which has increased by more than $5.7 trillion during his presidency so far after rising about $7.8 trillion during Trumpโs full four-year tenure; it is the budget deficit (the one-year difference between spending and revenues), not the national debt (the accumulation of federal borrowing plus interest owed), that fell by $1.7 trillion over his…
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