This included references to Paris, but this was a reference to the disastrous fire and reconstruction of Notre Dame, rather than the Paris Agreement. This reflects the perceptions from the bubble of "Planet Billionaire" rather than the needs of "Planet People".
Claim: "The United States has among the cleanest air and drinking water on Earth."
Reality Check: Mr Trump has praised his administration's policies for improving air and water quality in the US before. However, his critics point to steps that reverse environmental protection and to America's intended exit from the Paris climate agreement. Air
quality in the US ranks as 10th best in the world, according to the
Environmental Performance Index, created by researchers at Yale and
Columbia universities. Drinking water in the US is named as joint top along with countries including the UK, Canada and Finland.
Claim: "The United States is in the midst of an economic boom - the likes of which the world has never seen before."
Reality Check: The
annual rate of growth in gross domestic product (GDP) - the value of
goods and services in the economy - has been between 2% and 3% under Mr
Trump. But under President Clinton, the annual growth rate was higher - reaching over 4%.
And if you look at the quarterly GDP growth rate, there was a period
under President Obama, in 2014, when it reached 5.5%. That's not been
matched during Mr Trump's term in office.
Claim: "Since my election, America has gained over seven million jobs."
Reality Check: According
to government statistics, just over seven million jobs have been added
since November 2016, when Mr Trump won the US election, although he
didn't assume office until January 2017. Barack Obama added 7.8 million jobs in his last three years in office.
And there has been job growth in the US for 110 consecutive months, with the Trump administration continuing an upward trend.
Claim: "The experts predicted a decade
of very, very slow growth or maybe even negative growth, high
unemployment and a dwindling workforce."
Reality Check: Mr
Trump didn't give details about which experts he was referring to or
precisely when the prediction was made. But the Congressional Budget
Office in January 2016 predicted real GDP would grow by 2.7% in 2016 and by 2.5% in 2017. And it predicted that from 2018 to 2020, the economy would grow at an average annual rate of 2%.
As
for jobs, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said in December 2015 jobs
would grow at an average of 0.5% a year between 2014 and 2024 - about
7.9 million in total.
Claim:
"After losing 60,000 factories under the previous two administrations...
America has gained 12,000 new factories under my administration."
Reality Check: Mr
Trump frequently highlights his success in growing the manufacturing
sector and compared his record against that of his his predecessors,
George W Bush and Barack Obama, in this speech.
At the start of 2001, compared with the end of 2016, there were about
54,000 more private manufacturing establishments (factories) in the US,
according to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. In terms of new factories, the most recent statistics are for the second quarter of 2019. And compared with when President Trump took office, in 2017, there were roughly 12,000 more manufacturing establishments. Most of these are small businesses, with fewer than five employees. The number of factories overall started to increase in 2013, during the Obama administration.
Claim: "Ten million people have been lifted off welfare in less than three years."
Reality Check: We
don't know exactly which welfare programmes Mr Trump is referring to.
The US has federal welfare programmes administered by individual states,
which may supplement these with their own schemes. We've looked at the biggest federal ones:
Two million fewer people received earned-income tax credit in 2019 than in 2016
More than six million (6,081,859) people lost their food-stamp benefits between January 2017 and October 2019
4.7 million fewer people were enrolled
on Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Programmes (Chip) in
October 2019 than in January 2017
Nearly 219,000 fewer people were receiving supplementary security income, in November 2016 than in November 2019
But we don't know how many claimed more than one benefit, so
it's difficult to reach an overall number of people "lifted off welfare"
under President Trump. The Trump administration has been looking to cut welfare programmes
and introduce changes in how poverty is measured, which would mean some
low-income households losing access to welfare assistance.
Claim: "Unemployment rates among African Americans have reached record lows."
Reality Check:
The African-American unemployment rate hit 5.5% in September 2019, the
lowest rate recorded since the US Labor Department started collecting
these statistics, in 1972. The unemployment rate has since risen slightly to 5.9%. However,
there is a disparity in weekly wages between racial groups. Black men
on average earn 26% less than white men and the disparity between
Hispanic men and white men is wider still, according to the latest
official statistics.
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