Earlier this week, President Donald Trump delivered his first address to Congress. He exaggerated the rising cost of insurance premiums since the Affordable Care Act passed, aka Obamacare. He also announced the creation an office to serve American victims" of crimes committed by immigrants. But in 2015, the public-policy research organization, the Cato Institute, found that immigrant communities don't have any effect on violent-crime rates, and some research has indicated that immigrants commit fewer violent crimes than people born in the U.S.

Yet that speech wasn’t the only barrage of misinformation to come out of the White House this week.

Trump also blasted the Environmental Protection Agency with false claims about the scope of its regulations, as defined by an Obama-era rule, and suggested that former President Barack Obama was behind nationwide protests against Republicans. To help you keep track of the facts, here is a list of some of the lies spread by the White House this week:

Trump claimed Obama is behind protests and leaks against his administration.

Fox News aired an exclusive interview with President Trump on Fox and Friends on Tuesday, where he said he said he thought Obama was behind the nationwide demonstrations and leaks, including against the repeal of the Affordable Care Act. “I think that President Obama is behind it because his people are certainly behind it,” Trump said.

Over the past month, thousands of people across the country have come to town hall meetings to voice their concerns. But these protests have hardly been monolith. CNN reported that a wide variety of groups, including Organizing for Action and MoveOn.org, helped provide resources for town hall protesters. Some of these groups have connections to Obama’s past campaigns, Organizing for Action in particular. Even so, as CNN reported, today they mostly offer guidance to be resources to constituents who want to make their voices heard," according to Organizing for Action's spokesperson. They are not an organized campaign to mobilize a nationwide movement on Obama’s behalf.

ABC News also refuted Trump's notion that Obama was behind these protests cropping up across the country, and concluded, "There is no evidence that the project has any direct relationship with Obama."

Kellyanne Conway spread a false report that two prominent Democrats didn't stand and applaud during the standing ovation for the widow of a Navy SEAL.

Since Trump became president, the White House has repeatedly accused critics of being un-American. This week, counselor to the President, Kellyanne Conway, retweeted claims that one lawmaker allegedly did not stand to show patriotism during a key part of the president’s address to Congress.

One Trump supporter on Twitter claimed that Democrats [Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Rep. Keith Ellison] (http://www.politifact.com/punditfact/statements/2017/mar/01/blog-posting/reports-falsely-accuse-democrats-refusing-stand-go/) didn't participate during a standing ovation for the widow of a fallen Navy SEAL. An image of Schultz and Ellison sitting and listening to Trump’s speech was spread by conservative news outlets like Fox News and The Blaze, alongside claims that they disrespected the military family. Conway had previously tweeted nameless criticism of politicians who “remain seated.” After inaccurate reports spread about Schultz and Ellison, Conway also retweeted the the inaccurate claim from another Twitter user (who's since deleted the tweet).

Schultz responded by going on CNN to address the issue directly. “They [Trump’s administration] generate and perpetuate fake news...they intentionally put out false information so that they can try to control the news cycle," Schultz said.

Video footage of the standing ovation shows Schultz and Ellison stood alongside their peers and applauded.