This week Trump's administration is still reeling from the untimely resignation of former national security advisor Michael Flynn, who was reportedly vulnerable to blackmail from Moscow after engaging in discussions about U.S. sanctions against Russia with the Russian ambassador. Flynn’s resignation was soon followed by yet another Russia-related scandal. On Tuesday, both The New York Times and CNN reported that U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies intercepted calls between Russian intelligence agents and Trump’s team throughout his campaign. (Trump's campaign officials have denied improper contacts with Russian officials.) Yet despite all the chaos, including accusations of treasonous behavior by some, including Massachusetts congressman Seth Moulton, the president still found time to lie about his electoral college victory and voter fraud.

To help you keep track of the truth, we’ve catalogued some of the false statements pouring out of the White House this week.

He lied about having the “biggest electoral win” in decades.

On Thursday, President Trump held a 75-minute press conference. In addition to announcing that R. Alexander Acosta would be his new labor secretary nominee, Trump also bragged about his electoral college victory. "I guess it was the biggest electoral win since Ronald Reagan," he said. That statement is false. Former presidents Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, and George H. W. Bush all received more electoral college votes than Trump, who garnered 306 votes. For comparison, The Hill reported that Obama received 365 electoral votes in 2008 and 332 votes in 2012.

He dragged CNN. Again.

On Monday, Bernie Sanders appeared on CNN to discuss the controversy surrounding Flynn’s resignation. During that interview, Sanders made fun of the president’s claim that he was completely unaware of the reports. “I don’t know, maybe he’s watching CNN fake news,” Sanders quipped. After telling interviewer Erin Burnett that the reference was a joke, and her acknowledging the joke, his audio cut out and the outlet quickly switched to a commercial break. The interview continued after that break for nine minutes.

However, Trump tweeted that CNN deliberately cut Sanders off for calling the network “fake news.” Sanders explicitly clarified during the interview that the reference was a joke. In a tweet, Sanders derided Trump for calling critical media outlets “fake news,” implying that Trump doesn't understand criticism is an integral part of democracy.

Trump and members of his administration keep lying about voter fraud.