Carly Fiorina oozes confidence on the debate stage. The Republican presidential candidate always manages to be armed with an arsenal of facts and figures. She’s incredibly smooth and well-spoken. She never fails to shrink from a fight with her 2016 rivals.
There’s just one problem: In many of Fiorina’s standout debate moments that seem to soar on stylistic grounds, the former Hewlett-Packard CEO has said things that leave fact-checkers howling over the substance.
Take Tuesday night’s debate in Milwaukee, where Fiorina went after Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump on foreign policy. At one point, she earned applause when she took a dig at the billionaire real estate mogul, noting that unlike him, she had met Russian President Vladimir Putin “not in a green room for a show, but in a private meeting.”
RELATED: Everything you need to know about last night’s GOP debate
However, during a September interview on “The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon,” Fiorina used the term “green room” to describe her own encounter with the Russian leader, saying “I met [Putin] in Beijing. We were in sort of a green room setting—each of us were giving a speech at a major economic conference.”
Fiorina campaign spokeswoman Sarah Isgur Flores stressed to MSNBC on Wednesday that Fiorina’s meeting was at a conference and not a television show. (Trump had previously said he got to know Putin “very well” because the two were on “60 Minutes” when it turns out the two interviews were taped separately.)
“The point wasn’t the type of room it was. The point was that Trump tried to claim he ran into him before ’60 Minutes’ — which of course turns out to be entirely fabricated. Carly had a meeting with Putin for 45 minutes at a conference,” said Flores.
Fiorina’s defense proposals, which she strongly laid out on Tuesday night, are also being called into question.
In many ways, Fiorina seems to be her own worst enemy. It’s not moderators or her GOP rivals who get her into trouble — it’s her own verbal missteps and loose use of the facts.
Just look at last month’s GOP debate, when Fiorina rattled off a debunked claim that 92% of the job losses in President Obama’s first term belonged to women. Days later, and after fact checkers called her out, Fiorina said she “misspoke.” But she brushed off the criticism as no big deal and instead shifted the blame to the “liberal media.”
“It attacks the messenger trying to avoid the message,” she told ABC News days after the debate in Colorado.








