Sunday, May 29, 2011

Fact Checking Pawlenty Shows Plenty of Failures, or, WHY Minnesota Wouldn't Vote for Pawlenty If He Was the 2012 Candidate

We wouldn't vote for him (per polls now from the past two years) because we know him.

And, we wouldn't vote for him (or Michele Bachmann) because despite using the word "Truth" a lot, or  more accurately abusing the word Truth, TPaw doesn't have the close personal acquaintance with it that he would like to claim.

Politifact.com has given TPaw only three truth-o-meter ratings - a pants on fire, their worst rating for a lie; a rating of false; a full flop for their flip-flop category, which you can see here.  Hardly auspicious for Mr. Tell-the-Truth.

Factcheck.org has looked at TPaw as well, which you can read in greater detail here.  They have four separate factcheck failures for TPaw where he has failed to tell the truth, one more failure than was found by Politifact.com.  Tsk tsk tsk, TPaw! Shame on you!

But the grand daddy of finding the ways in which TPaw ISN'T a truth-teller comes from the Fact checking done by the AP in his first week of running; they list six fact check failures / LIES, but they do find one claim that he did pass as truthful - not a great track record, 6 lies - 1 truth:

FACT CHECK: Not the whole truth in Pawlenty claims
(AP) – 5 days ago

WASHINGTON (AP) — "Truth" was Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty's buzzword Monday when he announced his campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. He said he will tell the truth about hard choices facing the nation while others — President Barack Obama notably among them — do not.

A parsing of Pawlenty's opening-day statements shows they were not the whole truth.

Here is a sampling of his claims Monday and how they compare with the facts.
___
PAWLENTY: "The truth is, people getting paid by the taxpayers shouldn't get a better deal than the taxpayers themselves. That means freezing federal salaries, transitioning federal employee benefits, and downsizing the federal work force as it retires." — Campaign announcement.

THE FACTS: A federal pay freeze is already in effect. Obama proposed and Congress approved a two-year freeze on the pay of federal employees, exempting the armed forces, Congress and federal courts.
___
PAWLENTY: "ObamaCare is unconstitutional." — USA Today column.
THE FACTS: Obama's health care overhaul might be unconstitutional in Pawlenty's opinion, but it is not in fact unless the Supreme Court says so. Lower court rulings have been split.
___
PAWLENTY: "Barack Obama has consistently stood for higher taxes." — Campaign announcement.

THE FACTS: Obama's record shows more tax cutting than tax raising. The stimulus plan early in his presidency cut taxes broadly for the middle class and business, and more recently he won a substantial cut in Social Security taxes for a year. He also campaigned in support of extending the Bush-era tax cuts for all except the wealthy, whose taxes he wanted to raise. In office, he accepted a deal from Republicans extending the tax cuts for all. As for tax increases, Obama won congressional approval to raise them on tobacco and tanning salons. The penalty for those who don't buy health insurance, once coverage is mandatory, is a form of taxation.
___
PAWLENTY: "For decades before I was elected, governors tried and failed to get Minnesota out of the top 10 highest-taxed states in the country. I actually did it." — Campaign announcement.

THE FACTS: Minnesota remains among the 10 worst states in its overall tax climate, according to the Tax Foundation. In its 2011 State Business Tax Climate Index, the anti-tax organization ranks Minnesota 43rd, making it the eighth worst state. The ranking slipped from 41st two years earlier. The index considers corporate, individual, sales, unemployment insurance and property taxes.
___
PAWLENTY: "I stood up to the teachers unions and established one of the first statewide performance pay systems in the country." — Campaign announcement.

THE FACTS: The system may be statewide, but it is voluntary and most school districts have not joined. Out of the 340 school districts and charter schools in the state, with 830,000 students, 104 districts and charter schools serving 254,592 students are currently enrolled in the performance-pay program.
___
PAWLENTY: "There's only four governors in the country that got an A grade from the tough-grading Cato Institute for fiscal management. I was one of them." — ABC's "Good Morning America."

THE FACTS: Cato may be a tough grader, but it is hardly objective. The institute holds staunch libertarian views, including a passion for smaller government, and graded governors in 2010 according to their success in cutting taxes and spending. Pawlenty tied for third with Democratic Gov. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, behind South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, both Republicans.
___
PAWLENTY: "I could stand here and tell you that we can solve America's debt crisis and fix our economy without making any tough choices. But we've heard those kinds of empty promises before."

THE FACTS: Although politicians typically talk about the need for hard choices, Pawlenty actually does name several. He proposes to phase out ethanol and corporate subsidies, raise the Social Security retirement age for young workers and restrain cost of living increases for Social Security recipients who are wealthy.
Associated Press writers Brian Bakst in Des Moines, Iowa, and Jim Drinkard in Washington contributed to this report

And then there was his blunder, confusing Iraq and Iran (they're hardly interchangeable). This is Minnesota, and apart from the misstatements of fact which we have come to expect from the right by Michele Bachmann, for the most part we expect a higher level of knowledge from our elected officials. This was like one of those senior moments that were such a problem for John McCain; but he was far older than TPaw. So that's not an excuse. It's also the kind of mistake we expect from popsie Palin, who proves over and over how ill-educated SHE is; but TPaw is supposed to be appealing to the smart part of the base, not the part that wants to dumb down everything (especially science). 
 


And then we have TPaw called out for his lack of truth telling by former Governor Arne Carlson on the Ed Show on MS NBC. Ed Schultz is from these parts, so it's not like he was unfamiliar with TPaw's track record, but Arne pretty much nailed it to the wall for the rest of the country even more definitively.


TPaw (and for that matter, you too Congresswoman Bachmann) if you can't carry your home state where we know you, you can't win the general election nationwide. It doesn't matter how many interviews you do, how many stages you stand on, or how much money you raise. You can't win.

But please, by all means run; it provides Saturday Night Live, and dozens of comedians and even more political cartoonists with material to entertain us a whole lot more than you do directly.

2 comments:

  1. Nice post! I like these fact-checking posts, especially since you provide links.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you WCG - I enjoy doing these.

    ReplyDelete