Whitehouse's Ads Rated "Four Pinocchios" by the Washington Post

GoLocalProv Political Team

Whitehouse's Ads Rated "Four Pinocchios" by the Washington Post

Washington Post gives Whitehouse's ads four Pinocchios
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse’s ads are rated "four Pinocchios" by the Washington Post fact checker.

Four Pinocchios is the Washington Post's highest mark for untruthfulness. 

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According to the post, Whitehouse "has no evidence to support his incendiary campaign claim that Republicans want to eliminate these programs. It’s especially bad that the senator makes this claim himself in an ad."

"Senator Whitehouse seems to have a tenuous relationship with the truth. It is clear that Senator Whitehouse is recognizing the growing momentum behind our campaign and is becoming ever more desperate with his blatantly false attacks. You'd think with the millions of dollars he's spent on these ads, he'd at least be able to hire a fact checker. But he instead has decided that telling his Big Lies over and over again will fool enough people to make it worth his while. For Shame Sheldon! Pull these false ads now and apologize to Rhode Islanders for your lies,” said Bob Flanders, GOP challenger for the United States Senate seat.

The Ad

In Whitehouse’s most recent ad, seen above, he says “The Republicans have run enormous deficits up to provide tax cuts to big corporations, millionaires and billionaires. Now that we have this deficit problem we caused with this tax bill, they turn around and they say they have got to get rid of Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. They’re going to take the trillions of dollars that they gave to the wealthiest Americans, and they are going to pull it out of the healthcare of regular Americans.”

Washington Post Analysis

In analyzing the ad, the Washington Post fact checker writes the following:

"There are a number of ways a Democrat could frame the debate over the debt and entitlements, such as complaining that Republicans who did not blink twice about increasing the deficit with a tax cut have little ground to say that the deficit is caused mostly by popular entitlement programs. Whitehouse, in his ad, starts to go down that road but then goes off course by twisting McConnell’s statement into the unsupported claim that Republicans have said that because of the deficits, “they have got to get rid of Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security.”

That’s false. Every time Republicans have tried to alter these programs without Democratic buy-in, they have paid a political price at the polls. That’s why McConnell says there needs to be a bipartisan solution.

Whitehouse would have been on more solid ground if he had protested that a mostly partisan tax bill had made the deficit problem worse and made it harder to grapple with baby-boomer retirements. But he has no evidence to support his incendiary campaign claim that Republicans want to eliminate these programs. It’s especially bad that the senator makes this claim himself in an ad — during a race in which he doesn’t need to go so negative".


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