Washington (CNN) As senators decided Thursday whether to call witnesses in Donald Trump's impeachment trial, the President did what he usually does: say numerous things that aren't true.

Trump critics have warned that he would be emboldened if he were acquitted by the Senate. In the hours before Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander announced he would vote against calling witnesses, likely ensuring a quick acquittal , it was at least clear that Trump was not at all chastened.

On Thursday, the President did a Fox News interview, delivered a speech in Michigan nominally about the new US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, and held a campaign rally in Des Moines, Iowa. He was dishonest in all three venues, repeating some of his favorite falsehoods in rapid succession.

We're not finished fact checking the transcripts, but here are the 27 false claims we've identified already:

Impeachment

Trump told Fox News' Peter Doocy of impeachment: "It's a ridiculous, horrible partisan, situation. We won 196 to nothing in the House." At the event in Michigan, he said, "We won 196 to nothing on a little vote a couple of weeks ago."

Trump was referring to House impeachment votes he lost -- but where 196 or more Republicans voted in his favor, with none against. He lost an October vote to set the rules of the impeachment inquiry 232-196 , then the December votes on the two articles of impeachment, 230-197 and 229-198

Accomplishments

Man of the Year in Michigan

Trump said in Michigan : "In fact, I was honored, believe it or not. About 10 years ago, I came to Michigan. I was honored by a wonderful group. I was the 'Man of the Year.'"

There is no evidence Trump ever got a Man of the Year award in Michigan. You can read a full fact check here

Estate tax

Trump claimed in Michigan and at the Iowa rally to have eliminated the estate tax, saying at the rally of his 2017 tax law: "Because of that, there is no death tax or inheritance tax."

The law doubled the amount of estate value that is exempt from the estate tax, but the law did not eliminate the tax entirely. And there is no basis for his suggestion at both events that small farmers and small businesspeople would especially benefit from his changes; few paid the tax even before. You can read a full fact check here

Household income

Trump claimed in Michigan that real median household income had increased by "$10,000" during his presidency.

Trump was taking a private firm's estimate of about $5,000 in pre-tax household income gains and doubling it for reasons that do not make sense. You can read a full fact check here

Veterans Choice

Trump said at the Iowa rally: "I took care of the vets. We got Choice." He added that people had unsuccessfully tried to get this veterans health care program approved "for 52 years," claiming: "What I am good at is getting things approved, and I got it approved."

Trump did not get the Veterans Choice program passed, nor had there been an unsuccessful 52-year effort to get it passed. The program was signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2014 . In 2018, Trump signed the VA MISSION Act, which expanded and changed the Choice program.

Burden-sharing with South Korea

Trump said at the Iowa rally that, under a deal with South Korea about sharing the cost of the US troops in the country, "They gave us $500 million a year more."

As the New York Times reported in February when debunking an earlier version of Trump's "$500 million" claim: "Under the one-year deal, this year South Korea will pay 1.04 trillion won, or $925 million, an increase of $70 million from last year's $855 million."

The USMCA

Trump said at the Iowa rally: "USMCA: the biggest trade deal ever signed in the history of the world. OK, it is."

Except that it's not. The Trans-Pacific Partnership included all three of the countries in the USMCA -- the US, Mexico and Canada -- plus nine others. Also, it's worth noting that the USMCA mostly makes incremental tweaks to the previous North American Free Trade Agreement. You can read a full fact check here

Energy production

Trump said at the Iowa rally: "We've ended the war on American energy. The United States is now the number one producer of oil and natural gas anywhere on Earth, by far."

The US has not just "now" become the world's top energy producer: it took the top spot in 2012, according to the US government's Energy Information Administration -- under the very Obama administration Trump is accusing of perpetrating a "war" on the industry.

You can read a full fact check here

Mexican border

Trump said of Mexico at the Iowa rally: "They put up 27,000 soldiers on our southern border."

Mexico has deployed around 27,000 troops, but Trump exaggerated how many are being stationed near the US border in particular. CNN reported on November 2 that the Mexican government had reported the following: "Nearly 15,000 troops are deployed to Mexico's northern border, where they've set up 20 checkpoints. ... At the southern border, 12,000 troops are deployed and have set up 21 checkpoints." You can read a full fact check here

Individual mandate

Trump said at the Iowa rally: "We got rid of the individual mandate, the most unpopular thing, which essentially killed Obamacare."

The individual mandate, which required Americans to obtain health insurance, was indeed a key part of Obamacare -- but Trump hasn't killed Obamacare, essentially or otherwise. He has not eliminated Obamacare's expansion of the Medicaid insurance program for low-income people, the federal and state marketplaces that allow people to shop for coverage, or the consumer subsidies that help many of them make the purchases.

Pre-existing conditions

Trump said at the Iowa rally: "We are protecting people with pre-existing conditions, and we always will the Republican Party."



Federal judges The Trump administration and congressional Republicans have repeatedly put forward bills and filed lawsuits that would weaken Obamacare's protections for people with pre-existing conditions. Trump is currently supporting a Republican lawsuit that is seeking to declare all of Obamacare void.

Trump said at the Iowa rally: "To uphold the rule of law, we have confirmed 191 federal judges, a record...And two great Supreme Court justices, by the way."

Trump had not set a record for total judges appointed as of this point in a first presidential term; Jimmy Carter had appointed 197 judges by late January of his fourth year in office, according to data from Russell Wheeler , a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution who tracks judicial appointments. Wheeler said Trump has appointed 187 judges by traditional counting methods -- two Supreme Court justices, 50 appeals court judges and 135 district court judges -- but that it's possible to get to a total of 191 judges by adding Trump's three appointments to the Court of Federal Claims and his designation of a sitting judge on that court as chief judge.

Drug overdose deaths

Trump said at the Iowa rally: "Drug overdose deaths have declined for the first time in nearly 31 years."

This was one of Trump's trademark little exaggerations of accomplishments that need no exaggeration. The decline in overdose deaths in 2018 was the first since 1990 , 28 years prior.

The 2016 election

The Electoral College margin over Clinton

Trump said at the Iowa rally of the Electoral College margin in the 2016 election: "We got 306 to 223."

Hillary Clinton earned 232, not 223, electoral votes to Trump's 306. This was not a one-time slip; Trump habitually says "223."

The relative size of that Electoral College margin

Trump said in Michigan: "But we had a tremendous, landslide Electoral College victory, like people haven't seen in a long time."

Aside from Trump's dubious characterization of the result as an Electoral College "landslide" -- the winning candidate has earned a larger share of electoral votes in 45 of 58 presidential elections, the New York Times has noted -- it's not true that people haven't seen such a margin of victory "in a long time." Obama had a bigger margin in both of the two previous elections.

A Clinton crowd

Trump said in Michigan that Hillary Clinton had "a small gathering of about 400 people" at her final Michigan rally of the 2016 election.

Democrats

Trade with South Korea

Trump said at the Iowa rally that Clinton had promised that a trade agreement with South Korea was "going to produce 250,000 jobs."

There is no record of Clinton projecting an increase of 250,000 jobs because of the United States-Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS). Obama said the deal would "support at least 70,000 American jobs."

Obama said in 2009 that increasing the US share of trade with Asia from 9% to 10% "could mean 250,000, 300,000 jobs," but he was not specifically attributing that estimate to the potential effects of a trade deal with South Korea.

A Biden crowd

Trump said at the Iowa rally that Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden drew a speech crowd so small that the campaign turned it into a roundtable discussion, roping in unwitting attendees to answer questions like, "What do you think of socialism?"

There is simply no evidence this happened. Biden's campaign says it didn't, and Trump's campaign did not respond to a request to identify the event he was talking about.

Open borders

Trump said at the Iowa rally that Democrats support "open borders."

Even prominent Democrats who advocate the decriminalization of the act of illegally entering the country, such as Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, do not support completely unrestricted migration, as Trump regularly suggests.

Social Security

Asked by Doocy about allegations he wants to take away Social Security -- he vaguely told CNBC last week that entitlement programs will be on his plate "at some point" -- Trump said "I'm the one that saved it. The Democrats wanted to do it last time."

Trump wasn't clear what he meant by "do it," but prominent Democrats did not want to cut Social Security, much less take it away, when Trump was running in 2016. Clinton proposed to increase Social Security benefits.

Green New Deal

Trump said at the Iowa rally that Democratic Hawaii Sen. Mazie Hirono had endorsed the Green New Deal environmental proposal, then "they started screaming at her in Hawaii" because the proposal would mean "no more airplanes," which she had not known. Trump suggested, mockingly, that she responded that "we're going to build a railroad" with "the world's largest track."

That is not what happened; Trump was twisting an exchange Hirono had with a reporter. You can read a full fact check here

China and tariffs

Agricultural purchases

Trump said at the Iowa rally that the most China ever spent on US agricultural products in a year is "$16 billion," claiming that Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue told him this.

China spent $25.9 billion on American agricultural products in 2012, according to figures from the Department of Agriculture. In 2017, the year before the trade war began, China spent $19.5 billion. In 2016, it was $21.4 billion. Chinese purchases plummeted to $9.1 billion in 2018.

Tariffs on China

Trump said at the Iowa rally of his tariffs on China: "We never got 10 cents from China. China took from us. We didn't take from China right."

Numerous studies have shown that Americans, not China, are paying most of the cost of Trump's tariffs. In addition, it's not true the US has never received "10 cents" from tariffs on China. The US has had tariffs on China for more than two centuries; FactCheck.org reported that the US generated an "average of $12.3 billion in custom duties a year from 2007 to 2016, according to the U.S. International Trade Commission DataWeb."

The media

CNN cameras

Trump criticized CNN at the Iowa rally, then pointed at the back of the room and said, "Oops, their camera just went off. Look, their camera. It just went off, CNN."

CNN's photojournalists do not turn off cameras when Trump insults CNN, and Trump would not be able to notice even if they did: they do not use any light that goes on and off when they start and stop recording.

Trump has repeatedly made this false claim at his rallies. You can read a full fact check here

Democrats and the Rolls-Royce

At the Iowa rally, Trump said the media humorlessly accused him of lying when he had told a joke that California Gov. Gavin Newsom wanted to give undocumented immigrants a free Rolls-Royce.