Health care reform: A simple explanation
We've knocked down a lot of false claims about the health bill, telling you what it's not . Here we take time out to tell you what it is .
We've knocked down a lot of false claims about the health bill, telling you what it's not . Here we take time out to tell you what it is .
With so many claims and counterclaims, we choose our 10 most significant Truth-O-Meter items.
We check two statements from President Obama's town hall in Portsmouth, N.H. We find he's right about coverage for janitors but exaggerating whether you can keep your health plan.
Palin spins a dystopian scenario where the elderly and disabled must petition for care. But that's not part of any actual health care legislation.
Readers sent us a chain e-mail that comments on the House health reform bill page by page. Most of its factual assertions are wrong.
It's double Pants on Fire! day at PolitiFact.com: We check a chain e-mail on illegal immigrants and comments from TV and radio personality Glenn Beck.
Pundits are talking after last week's arrest of African-American scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. We check their facts.
Readers take us to task for our items on oil imports, Hamas and incandescent light bulbs.
We check the president's claim about insurance company profits (False) and an unusual one from a health group leader about end-of-life care for seniors (Pants on Fire!).
We crank up our Flip-O-Meter and award two Full Flops — one to President Obama and one to Sarah Palin.
With a 1,000-page bill now pending in Congress, we move 10 promises from No Action to In the Works.
A left-leaning group says Republican Congressman Adam Putnam was silent after Rush Limbaugh called Sonia Sotomayor a racist. Actually, Putnam spoke up.