One of Donald Trump’s more unnerving habits is bragging about accomplishments that don’t exist in reality. To hear the president tell it, for example, he’s already solved the North Korea nuclear crisis, begun construction on a border wall, extracted major concessions from our NATO allies, and struck history’s largest trade deal with Mexico.
None of those things have actually happened, but Trump doesn’t appear to care. The Republican routinely brags about imagined triumphs, insisting that his made-up accomplishments are real.
He did it again this week during striking remarks to a group of evangelical Christians at the White House. NBC News reported:
In a closed-door meeting with evangelical leaders Monday night, President Trump repeated his debunked claim that he had gotten “rid of” a law forbidding churches and charitable organizations from endorsing political candidates, according to recorded excerpts reviewed by NBC News.
In fact, the law remains on the books, after efforts to kill it in Congress last year failed.
At issue is something called the Johnson Amendment, which prevents tax-exempt entities, including houses of worship, from intervening in partisan elections. Trump, eager to please his allies in the religious right movement, has made repeal of the federal tax law provision a top priority.
The provision, however, remains intact — which made it problematic when the president told his guests on Monday night, “Now one of the things I’m most proud of is getting rid of the Johnson Amendment…. Now you’re not silenced anymore. It’s gone and there’s no penalty anymore.”
This was the opposite of the truth. Trump didn’t repeal the Johnson Amendment, and those who violate federal tax law may face penalties from the IRS, including the possible loss of their tax-exempt status.
So why would the president lie to a group of his allies? It’s possible Trump was simply confused — he often seems to struggle with the line between our reality and his alternative one — but it’s just as likely that his misplaced boasts stem from his panic about the midterm elections.









