Five years, 1,000 factchecks
A look back at our 1,000 items shows a period of sweeping political change in Wisconsin -- and offers a glimpse at the future
A look back at our 1,000 items shows a period of sweeping political change in Wisconsin -- and offers a glimpse at the future
Donald Trump returns to Georgia Monday, with a rally in Macon.
PolitiFact Georgia is ready with fact-checks on claims from the GOP presidential contender.
Trump was literally wrong when he said Chevrolet "doesn't exist" in Tokyo. But on the ground in Japan, the kernel of truth in his statement is easier to see.
Martin O'Malley told a Texas journalist that immigration reform will drive up U.S. household incomes $250 a year.
As the 2016 presidential campaign steams toward the early primaries and caucuses, readers have found a lot to critique in our coverage of both Democrats and Republicans.
• In Context: Donald Trump's comments on a database of American Muslims
• Fact-checking Donald Trump on 9/11 celebrations and murder statistics
Just how hefty is the food on our tables this Thanksgiving - and some of the folks gathered there?
Let PolitiFact serve up the answers.
Whatever you're enjoying this Thanksgiving, maybe you'll appreciate reporter Tom Kertscher's 2014 look into whether American turkeys are heavier than they once were.
Does Donald Trump want a registry for all Muslims? Or just some Muslims? Or no database at all? We parse his comments from the past several days.
• Mailbag: A few readers say they're with Trump on 9/11 celebrations
Proponents of firearm legislation draw comparisons between Florida and laws in other states to make their case.
Donald Trump said he watched "thousands and thousands" of people in Jersey City, N.J., cheering as the World Trade Center collapsed. We rated that Pants on Fire. More than a dozen readers wrote to us that they saw much the same thing, although their recollections differed.
Shortly after this month's deadly attacks in Paris, several articles from conservative blogs reported that protesters from the University of Missouri were angry that the terrorist attacks directed the national spotlight away from race relations and recent events at MU.
Greg Abbott, citing a web post, said Syrians were "caught" by federal agents at the border in Laredo.
We found that claim Mostly False.