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PolitiFact's review for today's Cantor-Brat primary

College professor Dave Brat, left, is challenging U.S. Rep. Eric Cantor in the 7th District Republican primary today. College professor Dave Brat, left, is challenging U.S. Rep. Eric Cantor in the 7th District Republican primary today.

College professor Dave Brat, left, is challenging U.S. Rep. Eric Cantor in the 7th District Republican primary today.

Nancy  Madsen
By Nancy Madsen June 10, 2014

Voters go to the polls today to decide the testy 7th District Republican primary race between U.S. rep. Eric Cantor and challenger Dave Brat.

The winner will face Democrat Jack Trammell, a professor at Randolph Macon College, this fall.

PolitiFact Virginia looked at number of claims during the primary campaign. Here’s what we found:

Cantor: Brat "worked on Democrat Gov. Tim Kaine’s Council of Economic Advisors while Kaine tried to raise our taxes by over $1 billion."

A hallmark attack from Cantor is that Brat is a liberal professor. While we can’t evaluate that, we do know that Brat was a member of the Joint Advisory Board of Economists, which helps the state refine its predictions for the state’s economy as part of the annual budget process. Board members are not compensated and the panel does not weigh in on revenue or policy.

Kaine unsuccessfully proposed about $4 billion in tax increases during his administration. The ad creates the impression that Brat was involved in the policy proposals, but there is no evidence to support that. The claim needs clarification, so we rated it Mostly True.

Brat: Eric Cantor "voted to fully fund Obamacare in October."

Brat, in a TV ad, was  referring to a temporary appropriations bill that Cantor supported and Congress passed last fall to end a 16-day government shutdown. The measure guaranteed continued funding for discretionary programs that rely on annual congressional appropriations, including defense and education.

But Obamacare was only marginally affected by the shutdown and the bill Cantor backed. That’s because only about 10 percent of its costs are subject to appropriations by Congress. The bill Cantor supported to end the shutdown, among many other things, topped off the ACA’s funding tank. What Brat omitted is that 90 percent of Obamacare remained funded throughout the shutdown and was unaffected by the bill Cantor backed. Cantor opposed the original bill that established Obamacare in 2010.

We rated Brat’s claim Mostly False.

Cantor: "A liberal, pro-amnesty group" endorsed Brat.

Cantor wrote in an email that Casa de Virginia, a group supporting immigration reform, backed Brat during a May 28 rally in Richmond. Seeking to shore up his conservative support, Cantor cited the action as proof that that he is "standing up to Obama on illegal immigration."

But no speaker at the rally endorsed Brat. To the contrary, the keynoter stressed that the group was not taking sides in the primary.  A flier telling people to vote for "Anybody But Cantor" was passed out by a man attending the rally, but was not included in packets distributed by the organizers. We rated Cantor’s claim False.

Laura Ingraham, Brat supporter: Cantor and Rep. Luis Gutierrez were "touring the country last year … joined at the hip, working together in a bipartisan fashion indeed for the goal of immigration reform."

Ingraham, a conservative radio talk show host, campaigned for Brat and said that Cantor was working with Democrats to ease immigration laws. She backed her "tour" charge by noting Cantor and Gutierrez, D-Ill., attended a "Becoming America Pilgrimage" held a year ago in New York City to recognize the historic contribution of immigrants to the nation. They were among 100 political, academic and faith leaders from Washington who attended the event.

Aides for the two congressmen say this is the only immigration event both happened to attend and that Cantor and Gutierrez have never met to discuss immigration. Ingraham couldn’t point to another immigration event the two had attended. One gig does not make a national tour and we rated Ingraham’s statement Pants on Fire.

Cantor: Senate immigration legislation is the "Obama-Reid plan to give illegal immigrants amnesty."

Cantor was referring to legislation the Senate passed last year that would add billions for border security and open a pathway to citizenship for 11.5 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. This is amnesty, of a sort, because the illegal entry would eventually be forgiven after significant hurdles. The hurdles include at least $2,000 in fines plus back taxes and 5 to 10 years of waiting for a green card.

While President Barack Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid back the bill, the legislation was largely the idea of four Democrat and four Republican senators. Cantor’s description of the bill as a Democratic plan is misleading and PolitiFact National rated the statement Mostly False.

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PolitiFact's review for today's Cantor-Brat primary