Check Point: A Closer Look at Some Disputed Claims

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 17 Oktober 2012 | 12.07

President Obama said, "Not true, Governor Romney" to dismiss his rival's charge that oil and gas production permits and licenses on federal lands and waters had been cut in half over the past four years. (They have declined, but not by half).

Mitt Romney said at one point, "Let me go back and speak to the points that the president made, and let's get them correct" after Mr. Obama falsely charged that he had called the strict Arizona immigration law "a model for the nation." (Mr. Romney has spoken favorably of the state's immigration law, but the "model" Arizona law he talked about was the mandatory use of a federal electronic verification system to check the immigration status of new hires.)

And the moderator, Candy Crowley of CNN, got into the act, too, when Mr. Romney challenged Mr. Obama's assertion that he had gone into the Rose Garden the day after the attack on the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, and called it an act of terror.

"You said in the Rose Garden the day after the attack it was an act of terror?" Mr. Romney said disbelievingly. He later added: "I want to make sure we get that for the record, because it took the president 14 days before he called the attack in Benghazi an act of terror."

"Get the transcript," Mr. Obama replied.

Ms. Crowley interjected: "He did in fact, sir."

To which the president added, "Can you say that a little louder, Candy?"

The Obama administration has been criticized for shifting assessments of what really happened in Benghazi, which continued to change over the course of two weeks. But the day after the attacks, Mr. Obama did say, "No acts of terror will ever shake the resolve of this great nation, alter that character or eclipse the light of the values that we stand for."

There were plenty of questionable assertions at the second presidential debate. Here is a look at some of them:

Energy Policies

Mr. Obama and Mr. Romney carried out an extended dispute over energy policy that wandered into a thicket of half-truths, started by a question about gasoline prices that was never fully addressed.

Mr. Romney, describing Mr. Obama as hostile to traditional energy sources, repeated his assertion that all of the increase in domestic oil and gas production in the past three years had come on private, not public, lands and that the Obama administration had cut the number of oil and gas drilling permits on public lands in half. Neither assertion is quite true.

Oil and gas production on public lands has fluctuated during the Obama administration, but it has increased modestly (about 13 percent for oil and about 6 percent for gas) in the first three years of the Obama presidency, compared with the last three years of the administration of President George W. Bush, according to an analysis from the Energy Information Administration.

The Interior Department produced a report this year showing that drilling permits received and issued by the agency had indeed declined from the last years of the Bush administration to the first years of the Obama administration — but not by half. (In the 2007 fiscal year, the government issued 8,964 permits to drill on public lands; in 2008 the figure was 7,846. The numbers for 2009 and 2010 were 5,306 and 5,237.)

Mr. Obama said that 7,000 drilling permits had been granted but were not being used by oil companies, an accurate figure, according to the Interior Department.

Mr. Obama stated that renewable energy production had doubled during his presidency, which is true, and that oil imports were at their lowest level in 16 years, also accurate. He also said that the boom in natural gas production could produce 600,000 new jobs, a highly optimistic estimate, but he qualified it with the word "potentially."

But Mr. Obama mischaracterized Mr. Romney's energy plan, saying it was written by oil companies and favored only traditional sources of energy: oil, gas and coal. But Mr. Romney's energy plan does include a place for renewables, although he would sharply cut back on federal subsidies for wind, solar and other alternative energy sources. JOHN M. BRODER

Tariff on Chinese Tires

Mr. Obama said, "We had to make sure that China was not flooding our market with cheap tires," and therefore took action to save 1,000 jobs. It is true that in 2009, the Obama administration imposed a duty on Chinese tires, but last month the administration let the tariff expire.

The United Steelworkers Union, an Obama political supporter, sought the action, and many economists criticized it as politically motivated.

A study by the Peterson Institute for International Economics found that the tariff protected at most 1,200 American jobs. But last year alone, the institute found, it cost American consumers $1.1 billion in higher-priced tires.

Moreover, China responded by imposing tariffs on imports of American chicken parts that cost American poultry producers an estimated $1 billion. Last month, the Obama administration quietly let the tire tariff expire. Critics say it recognized that the economic costs of the sanction were too great. SHARON LaFRANIERE

Relations With Israel

Mr. Romney said that "the president said that he was going to put daylight between us and Israel." Is he correct?


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