Originally published on Legal Planet.
The Washington Post has a list of false statements by Trump, which turns out to be searchable by topic. They've found, "In the first eight months of his presidency, President Trump made 1,137 false or misleading claims, an average of five a day." As of March 17, he was up to 9,179 false statements. There were 200 false statements about the environment – that's about one every four days, which compares favorably to the number of misrepresentations on some other topics. They're quite repetitive, but I've picked out some of the most frequent ones. By the way, if you're interested, the Post also explains why each of these statements is wrong. I shudder to think what people who follow him on Twitter are picking up in the way of misconceptions.
Air and Water
Fossil Fuels
Climate Science
The Paris Agreement
Disasters
Trump's most recent misrepresentation about the environment was on March 16, in which he blamed the "yellow jacket" movement in France on the Paris Agreement and said that the U.S. tops all environmental lists. As the Post points out, neither of these assertions is true. The "yellow jacket" movement was sparked by a fuel tax and has expanded to include Macron's policies more generally (apparently with considerable help from Russian manipulation of social media); in the 2018 Environmental Performance Index by Yale and Columbia universities, Switzerland tops the list, and the U.S. is #27.
It's not clear how many people credit Trump's statements. But whether they do, his frequent misrepresentations reduce the credibility of government statements more broadly. They degrade public discourse with the implied message that truth doesn't matter much one way or the other.
Someone might uncharitably call these statements lies, but that may well be inaccurate because it implies deliberate falsehood. The President of the United States may actually believe these statements, which is even scarier in a way.