0 People 6 Fact-checks 10 Articles People (0) Fact-checks (6) Facebook posts stated on November 04, 2020 in a Facebook post: “If you were forced to use a Sharpie” to fill out your ballot, “that is voter fraud.” By Tom Kertscher• November 5, 2020 Instagram posts stated on November 08, 2022 in Instagram post: ‘No Sharpies on ballots’ permitted for in-person voting in Illinois. By Michael Majchrowicz• November 10, 2022 Facebook posts stated on November 03, 2020 in a Facebook post: Voters in Maricopa County, Ariz., were forced to vote using Sharpie pens that aren’t read by voting machines. By Tom Kertscher• November 4, 2020 Tweets stated on July 28, 2022 in a tweet: Pens provided by Maricopa County are part of a plot to rig the Arizona primary. By Amy Sherman• August 1, 2022 Donald Trump stated on September 04, 2019 in a tweet: Originally "almost all models predicted" Dorian would hit Alabama. By Amy Sherman• September 5, 2019 Facebook posts stated on July 05, 2020 in a Facebook post: Says Melania Trump’s dress at Mount Rushmore speech was designed from “drawings of several young victims of sex trafficking.” By Tom Kertscher• July 6, 2020 Articles (10) How online misinformation unfolded after Election Day, boosted by Trump and his allies By Daniel Funke• November 6, 2020 Trump, with help, is trying to sue and tweet his way to a second term. Could it work? By Amy Sherman• November 11, 2020 Fact-checking false claims about the 2020 election By Daniel Funke• November 20, 2020 Fact-checking Trump’s falsehoods about Hurricane Dorian By Amy Sherman• September 3, 2019 We fact-checked misinformation about the midterm elections, from Maricopa County to Detroit By Jeff Cercone• November 9, 2022 Misinformation and the Jan. 6 insurrection: When ‘patriot warriors’ were fed lies By Bill McCarthy• June 30, 2021 Incoming US Sen. Rick Scott kept half his campaign promises as Florida governor By Amy Sherman• January 7, 2019 Trump lost. Yet the 2020 election falsehoods live on in Arizona By Amy Sherman• June 21, 2021 Why the ‘stop the steal’ Arizona Republicans are wrong about 2020 By Maria Ramirez Uribe, Amy Sherman• August 3, 2022 How will social media platforms respond to election misinformation? It isn’t clear By Hana Stepnick• August 1, 2022
Facebook posts stated on November 04, 2020 in a Facebook post: “If you were forced to use a Sharpie” to fill out your ballot, “that is voter fraud.” By Tom Kertscher• November 5, 2020 Instagram posts stated on November 08, 2022 in Instagram post: ‘No Sharpies on ballots’ permitted for in-person voting in Illinois. By Michael Majchrowicz• November 10, 2022 Facebook posts stated on November 03, 2020 in a Facebook post: Voters in Maricopa County, Ariz., were forced to vote using Sharpie pens that aren’t read by voting machines. By Tom Kertscher• November 4, 2020 Tweets stated on July 28, 2022 in a tweet: Pens provided by Maricopa County are part of a plot to rig the Arizona primary. By Amy Sherman• August 1, 2022 Donald Trump stated on September 04, 2019 in a tweet: Originally "almost all models predicted" Dorian would hit Alabama. By Amy Sherman• September 5, 2019 Facebook posts stated on July 05, 2020 in a Facebook post: Says Melania Trump’s dress at Mount Rushmore speech was designed from “drawings of several young victims of sex trafficking.” By Tom Kertscher• July 6, 2020
How online misinformation unfolded after Election Day, boosted by Trump and his allies By Daniel Funke• November 6, 2020 Trump, with help, is trying to sue and tweet his way to a second term. Could it work? By Amy Sherman• November 11, 2020 Fact-checking false claims about the 2020 election By Daniel Funke• November 20, 2020 Fact-checking Trump’s falsehoods about Hurricane Dorian By Amy Sherman• September 3, 2019 We fact-checked misinformation about the midterm elections, from Maricopa County to Detroit By Jeff Cercone• November 9, 2022 Misinformation and the Jan. 6 insurrection: When ‘patriot warriors’ were fed lies By Bill McCarthy• June 30, 2021 Incoming US Sen. Rick Scott kept half his campaign promises as Florida governor By Amy Sherman• January 7, 2019 Trump lost. Yet the 2020 election falsehoods live on in Arizona By Amy Sherman• June 21, 2021 Why the ‘stop the steal’ Arizona Republicans are wrong about 2020 By Maria Ramirez Uribe, Amy Sherman• August 3, 2022 How will social media platforms respond to election misinformation? It isn’t clear By Hana Stepnick• August 1, 2022