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President Donald Trump spent the first week of April promising to roll back regulations, including the 2010 banking regulation former president Barack Obama signed after the financial crisis of 2008, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.

On Tuesday, Trump called Dodd-Frank “horrendous” and told a group of CEOs gathered at the White House that banks were struggling to give loans and survive. “Dodd-Frank is an example of what we’re working on and we’re working on it right now,” he said. “You look at the folks from government that are running all over the banks, they're running the banks. ...The regulators are running the banks.”

Yet, despite Trump’s claims, Obama-era banking regulations didn’t create a dire situation. CNBC reported that since the law took effect in July 2010, bank profits have more than doubled while bank lending to both businesses and consumers “continued to hit new highs.” As a matter of fact, commercial and industrial loans are among the fastest growing segments of the lending industry, according to Fortune. “In the past, Trump has said that Dodd-Frank is killing small business lending. But there isn't much evidence of that either,” Fortune reported.

Trump’s assessment of financial laws was hardly the only falsehood spread by the White House since April Fools’ Day. To help you keep track of the truth, here is a list of the most questionable claims the Trump administration made this week.

1. Trump lied about unemployment rates and Obama’s 2009 economic stimulus plan.

Trump’s White House meeting with CEOs on Tuesday was full of misconstrued claims about the American economy and infrastructure. First, he slammed Obama’s 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, claiming nothing was actually built despite over a “trillion” dollars of government spending. “Nobody ever saw anything being built. I mean, to this day, I haven't heard of anything that's been built,” he said.

The law actually had a budget closer to $830 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal. But rounded numbers aside, PolitiFact reported the Recovery Act prompted the completion of numerous construction projects across the country, including new light rail lines in Salt Lake City and Dallas; a new hospital in Camp Pendleton, California; a new courthouse in Austin, Texas; a new Cleveland Interbelt Bridge; a tunnel connecting Oakland to Contra Costa County in California; a $1 billion DFW Connector highway in Dallas-Fort Worth; and a $650 million elevated truck route to the Port of Tampa, Florida.

Furthermore, the bulk of the Recovery Act focused on tax cuts for individuals and small businesses and social programs, according to NPR. It's arguable, depending on who you ask, that stimulus was overall successful. But regardless, the indisputable fact is that the money did build infrastructure.

Next, Trump misrepresented national unemployment rates. “When you look for a job, you can't find it and you give up — you are now considered statistically employed. But I don’t consider those people employed,” he said. PolitiFact called Trump’s statement “mischaracterizing unemployment data.”

There is a separate category for people who give up on looking for a job because they lose hope. These people are officially counted as “not in the labor force,” according to PolitiFact, and not fully “employed” as Trump claimed.