Rep. Jeff Fitzgerald, State Assembly leader and US Senate candidate is just another GOP leader and fibber - - one true, two mostly false, one Pants on Fire rating so far - - earning him about the same false-to-true PolitiFact rating owned by Governor, Scott Walker.
There is a Wisconsin Republican struggle with truthiness, as I noted a couple of months ago:
Another day, another "False" rating from PolitiFact for a top Republican leader from Wisconsin.
This time, it's Reince Priebus, the Wisconsinite running the national GOP apparatus these days.
In a statement, Priebus was found to have doubled the amount of money public-employee union spent in the recall elections - - turning about $15 million into $30 million.
That's a pretty big goof, both in total dollars and in as a percentage of the true facts.
Accident or spin or willfully misleading? Hard to say, but it continues a pattern for Preibus where the word "false" shows up far more often than "true:
PolitiFact has rated seven of his statements this way: two half-true, four false, one Pants on Fire.
It seems that Wisconsin's senior GOP elected officials have far more negative than positive PolitiFact ratings. Here's a summary as of Sunday, August 28th:
PolitiFact has rated 11 of 31 statements by Gov. Scott Walker true, mostly true or half-true, while 20 were rated mostly false, false or Pants on Fire.
The scorecard for Lt. Gov. Rebecca Kleefisch: Three statements rated - - two false, one Pants on Fire.
For Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald: Four statements - - one half-true, one mostly false, two false...For US Senator Ron Johnson: Eleven statements - - one true, one mostly true, one half-true, four mostly false, four false.US Rep. Paul Ryan, by comparison, squeaks through with one more "true" than "false" in his ratings, but it's still a weak record for an incumbent and chair of the House Budget Committee: Nine statements rated: one true, one mostly true, three half-true, three mostly false and one Pants on Fire.
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