There is no evidence that Hurricane Milton is part of Tampa’s plan to become a "15-minute city." We rate this claim False. PolitiFact, " Hurricane Helene was not a product of weather modification.
On tax policy, Donald Trump would prioritize income tax cuts for wealthier Americans and corporations; Kamala Harris would raise taxes on those groups. Harris would expand the child tax credit for ...
"FEMA is not blockading people in Florida and preventing evacuations," FEMA stated on its website Oct. 8 in response to the social media rumors. "FEMA does not control traffic flow or conduct traffic ...
"Taylor Swift’s manager confirms: ‘Ticket sales are dead after Harris endorsement backlash," an Oct. 4 Facebook post said. It was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and ...
Trump said he had been to Gaza. His campaign provided no evidence that Trump visited Gaza. The State Department keeps a public log of presidents’ travels. It does not list Gaza as a place Trump ...
Social media users are citing an April 2024 article from a fictional website as evidence that Hurricane Milton, which as of Oct. 8 was headed for landfall in southwest Florida, was planned.
FEMA’s rumor response website says no money from the Disaster Relief Fund was diverted for immigration. The White House issued a similar statement. It’s inaccurate to describe the $1 billion as ...
However, Harris said "now," which ignores that the unemployment rate has trended upward for nearly two years. The unemployment rate for these groups currently ranges between six-tenths of a point to 2 ...
But the video does not show pre-Hurricane Milton clouds over Florida. It was uploaded in 2021 .
Experts told PolitiFact Hurricane Helene was a natural disaster. It was not formed through weather modification, and there are no projects that can modify or create hurricanes.
FEMA, the FAA and North Carolina emergency response agencies have rebutted claims that the Federal Emergency Management Agency or the Federal Aviation Administration were blocking flights with ...
After AARP published interviews with Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, a PolitiFact reader noticed that the organization did not fact-check the candidates’ responses.