For example, former Clinton campaign chair John Podesta, which Trump vaguely referred to as “Podesta Russian Company,” sat on the corporate board of an American business with a sole Russian board member. It’s not a Russian company. According to PolitiFact, “there doesn’t appear to be anything untoward or illegal about the fact that Podesta sat on a corporate board with a Russian banker.”

Trump’s misleading tweet was posted the day before Press Secretary Sean Spicer claimed the FBI finished the investigation of the Trump’s alleged ties to Russia.

“Every single person who has been briefed on this situation with respect to the situation with Russia — Republican, Democrat, Obama-appointee, career — have all come to the same conclusion,” Spicer said at a White House press briefing . “At some point, April [the reporter], you’re going to have to take “no” for an answer, with respect to whether or not there was collusion.”

The Associated Press deemed Spicer’s claim to be false as well, reporting that “no conclusions have been reached at all.”

2. Trump claimed it’s “not long” until Democrats make a deal with the White House because the Affordable Care Act will collapse.

The GOP health care plan failed to gather enough support in Congress last week. Trump responded by tweeting assurances that Republicans are still in “very good shape” because Democrats are sure to compromise “as soon as Obamacare folds.” Trump’s tweet claimed the end of the Affordable Care Act, ie Obamacare, is imminent.

Experts don’t all agree with the president. "I don't think the marketplace is collapsing," Dr. Mario Molina, chief executive of Molina Health Care, a major insurer on the ACA exchanges, told NBC News. Financier Steven Rattner wrote an op-ed for (The New York Times warning that Republicans may weaken the ACA then “try to blame Obamacare’s supporters.”

The ACA certainly wasn’t on the brink of folding when Trump entered the White House. Politico reported that the individual insurance market was stabilizing at the start of 2017. However, deliberate neglect from the Trump administration could cripple the industry. A Trump tweet doesn’t describe the current reality, but it may express an implicit threat instead.

3. Attorney General Jeff Sessions made misleading statements about crime in sanctuary cities.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions spoke out against sanctuary cities on Monday, which have formal and informal policies that protect against deportation for undocumented immigrants. “DUIs, assaults, burglaries, drug crimes, gang rapes, crimes against children, and murderers — countless Americans would be alive today and countless loved ones would not be grieving today if these policies of sanctuary cities were ended,” Sessions said.

But Sessions’s claim is not supported by evidence. As FactCheck.org reported in February, “limited research so far has found no evidence that sanctuary policies led to an overall higher rate of crime in the cities or counties where they exist.”

Session also mentioned an online poll by Harvard University and Harris Poll, where 80% of respondents affirmed that they think law enforcement should turn over undocumented immigrants to immigration authorities if the migrant is arrested for a crime. Sessions argued the poll shows the “vast majority of the American people” support stricter laws.

But according to The Washington Post, this online poll was not a scientific study and more reliable surveys suggest the public has a nuanced variety of opinions on sanctuary cities.

PolitiFact also deemed Sessions’s citation incomplete, as the poll specified the majority of respondents think this step is only necessary for “serious crimes.” California State Senator Kevin de León was quick to call out the Trump administration on Twitter, calling the speech a part of an “alternative facts” streak.

Related: Ivanka Trump Will Now Officially Be an Unpaid Federal Employee in the White House

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