Thursday, March 10, 2025. Annette’s Roundup for Democracy.
For Trump and MAGA, Lying is a strategy.
First, the Trump Lying Machine in action.
'Trump Effect' website takes credit for US investment made under Biden | Reuters
Trump website claims credit for $2.6 trillion in new investments in US. Reuters review found $1.3 trillion began under Biden or was routine spending. A spokesperson calls Trump 'greatest closer in modern history.’
July 8 (Reuters) - Within hours of taking office in January, President Donald Trump boasted about attracting $3 trillion in new corporate investments to the United States. Since then, Trump has said the investments have swelled to $14 trillion, or roughly half of the nation's annual gross domestic product.
The White House calls it "The Trump Effect" and features a rolling list on its website of more than 70 projects it says Trump's economic policies spurred, from a new bakery plant in Texas to a LEGO facility in Virginia and a microchip plant in Arizona.
As of July 2, the website, opens new tab listed more than $2.6 trillion in U.S. investments, well short of the $14 trillion Trump boasts about.
But a Reuters review found that just under half of the claimed spending on the website - totaling more than $1.3 trillion - originated under former President Joe Biden or represented routine spending repackaged to promote domestic investments.
At least eight of the projects touted by the White House had sought or secured critical local incentive packages before Trump took office while at least a half dozen other projects had already been announced by local officials or the companies themselves, Reuters found.
Two of the Trump Effect projects were aided by Biden's legislative efforts to boost domestic manufacturing, the review found.
One company on the list, Swiss-based Roche, warned that Trump's plans to equalize U.S. and international drug prices now threaten its promised $50 billion in U.S. investments.
Asked about taking credit for projects already underway before Trump came into office, the White House said the final investment decisions were announced under his watch and prove his economic policies are triggering U.S. investment.
“President Trump is the greatest closer in modern history, and his leadership and policies are a critical catalyst converting hypothetical discussions into firm investment commitments and ground being broken for new plants and offices," White House spokesperson Kush Desai said.
The Reuters review included interviewing local officials and reviewing public records and corporate statements. It was not clear in many cases what role, if any, Trump or his policies played in getting the deals across the line.
Mark Zandi, the chief economist at Moody's Analytics, said his economic forecast - along with the consensus estimates - for investment in the economy has remained relatively unchanged despite the White House's claims of new historic investments.
"I think despite all the announcements it hasn't translated into any change in expectations," Zandi said. "The fundamentals that ultimately drive investment spending, broadly, if anything, appear to have weakened since the start of the year."
Trump's push to impose sweeping tariffs on dozens of trading partners has injected uncertainty into global markets, lowering economic projections and freezing investment decisions, Zandi said. (Reuters)
Trump’s enablers learn to lie too.
The GOP’s New Lie After Cutting $1 Trillion From Medicaid: We Gave It More Money!
“We are increasing Medicaid expenditures by $200 billion,” Rep. Rob Bresnahan (R-Pa.) falsely said of Trump’s tax law, which will strip health care from millions.
House Republicans are in damage control mode after voting to gut Medicaid — and it's getting weird
WASHINGTON ― House Republicans who voted to pass President Donald Trump’s tax bill last week know it’s going to slash the federal Medicaid program by $1 trillion and kick millions of people off of their health care.
But that sounds bad. And people already hate this law. So instead of saying that, Republicans are trying out a new way of talking about the bill they all voted for: just pretend they voted to increase Medicaid spending!
But that sounds bad. And people already hate this law. So instead of saying that, Republicans are trying out a new way of talking about the bill they all voted for: just pretend they voted to increase Medicaid spending!
“I don’t know how you can call any of this a cut when we are increasing Medicaid expenditures by $200 billion,” Rep. Rob Bresnahan (R-Pa.) falsely claimed Tuesday on a conservative podcast, “The Bob Cordaro Show.”
Later in the show, Bresnahan also falsely claimed the law will lead to “the largest deficit reduction in, I think, what will be 30 years.”
It’s not clear what the Pennsylvania Republican is talking about regarding the $200 billion, but he is being misleading at best and lying at worst. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has clearly laid out how Trump’s tax-and-spending law will cut $1 trillion from Medicaid and increase the deficit by nearly $3.3 trillion over the next 10 years.
A Bresnahan spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.
In the same interview, he tried to tout that the law includes a new $50 billion fund to help rural hospitals survive the bill’s devastating Medicaid cuts. But it’s just simple math that $50 billion is nowhere near enough money to offset $1 trillion ― or 20 times more ― in cuts.
Rep. Gabe Evans (R-Colo.), meanwhile, mused that there’s been “a ton” of misinformation about the tax law and said it actually increases federal Medicaid spending, which is false.
“Under this bill, there will be more federal money going into Medicaid under the Republican plan every single year for the forecastable duration of this bill,” Evans said last Thursday on the public radio show, “Here & Now Anytime.”
Asked what he is talking about, Evans’ spokesperson Delanie Bomer said he is referring to the fact that Medicaid costs generally tend to increase every year ― a laughably weird point to make that entirely glosses over Republicans cutting $1 trillion from the program.
Evans is essentially arguing that while the bill may cut $1 trillion from Medicaid and kick millions of people off of health care, the government is still paying for the increased annual costs of health care for whoever can still get Medicaid benefits. He’s not talking about the elephant in the room, which is all the people who won’t have health coverage at all.
“Medicaid spending is always going up,” Bomer said of Evans’ argument. “It’s just going up at a lesser degree” because Trump’s tax law will strip $1 trillion from the program.
Asked why Evans voted for such a devastating cut to Medicaid, Bomer said the GOP congressman doesn’t want “illegal immigrants to receive taxpayer-funded health care” and wants to make sure people meet work requirements to qualify for Medicaid benefits.
Except undocumented immigrants are generally not eligible for Medicaid. And hospitals can’t turn them away if they need medical attention, meaning the hospitals already on the tightest financial footing — rural hospitals in particular, which serve a lot of Medicaid patients — will be hardest hit by the loss in dollars. The work requirements argument is also misleading, because Trump’s tax law imposes such strict new requirements that people who would otherwise qualify for Medicaid are now likely to fall through the cracks.
Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wis.) is testing out a different new way to talk about his vote for Trump’s tax law: He’s trying to take credit for Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) and the state legislature rushing to pass a state budget in order to lock in a higher match of federal dollars for Medicaid in the state under Trump’s law.
Because Wisconsin state leaders moved quickly to do this, the state will get $1 billion in new annual funding. In more than a dozen social media posts, Van Orden keeps insisting that if it weren’t for him, his governor and state legislature wouldn’t have gotten this money.
Except Van Orden had nothing to do with their efforts.
“Congressman Van Orden never personally advocated to the governor or our office for the hospital assessment provision to be included in the state budget until after it was clearly already part of the state budget, he had nothing to do with the hospital assessment being part of bipartisan state budget negotiations with Republican leaders, and he had nothing to do with the fact that the governor decided to enact the state budget before the federal reconciliation bill was signed,” Evers’ spokesperson Britt Cudaback told HuffPost on Tuesday.
Asked why he keeps trying to take credit for this $1 billion when it appears he had nothing to do with it, Van Orden said the fact that the governor signed the state budget into law at a late hour shows they were listening to him.
“The only reason [Evers] signed the bill at 1:30 a.m. was to make the deadline I spoke and wrote to him about,” he told HuffPost. “Period. Do that math.” (HuffPost)
One more thing.
Republican Senator Hawley spoke up too. Liar.
If this is what he believes, he should have voted against the budget bill. Don’t let him deceive you as he runs for President in 2028 talking about raising the minimum wage and protecting our most vulnerable. https://t.co/jOezNE3R9M
— Jessica Tarlov (@JessicaTarlov) July 9, 2025
How a Bully conducts Foreign Policy.
New York Times - President Trump said he planned to impose tariffs of 50 percent on imports from Brazil, and accused the Brazilian authorities of unfairly charging his political ally, former President Jair Bolsonaro, with attempting a coup — an extraordinary attempt to use trade to influence a criminal trial in a foreign nation. Brazil, the largest of the eight countries that Mr. Trump targeted for tariffs on Wednesday, said it would respond with levies of its own.
Trump's letter to the Federative Republic of Brazil.
Response from the President of Brazil.
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
FYI. The United States enjoys a trade surplus with Brazil, not a deficit.
This is personal to Trump who thinks he has found a weapon - Tariffs - by which he will rule the world. In this case, he wants to protect an anti- Democratic strongman.
JD Vance used to have an opinion about the Epstein files.
One more thing. Or two.
![Mar-a-largo has recently seen new files] (https://assets.buttondown.email/images/e2adf0e5-5f5d-464a-b0a0-3f6b6b311da3.jpeg?w=960&fit=max)
BREAKING: Jamie Raskin just challenged Trump to release the Epstein Files to prove that he is not involved.
— Brian Krassenstein (@krassenstein) July 10, 2025
Raise your hand if you agree!
pic.twitter.com/rTMVHe3nsM
As to New York’s Mayoral Politics.
A Big Endorsement for Mamdani. The UFT represents more than 200,000 education professionals.