Each day Media Bias Fact Check selects and publishes fact checks from around the world. We only utilize fact-checkers that are either a signatory of the International Fact-Checking Network (IFCN) or have been verified as credible by MBFC. Further, we review each fact check for accuracy before publishing. (D. Van Zandt)
Claim Codes: Red = Fact Check on a Right Claim, Blue = Fact Check on a Left Claim, Black = Not Political/Conspiracy/Pseudoscience/Other
![]() |
Claim by Viral image: “The NAACP has received credible information that some of the white nationalist groups … will be looking to snatch black men and boys and hang them, shoot them, torture them and kill them.”
PolitiFact rating: False No, the NAACP didn’t warn about white nationalist groups killing Black men |
![]() |
Claim by the Gateway Pundit: Was corrupted voting system software used in Michigan to steal 6,000 votes from President Donald Trump and was that software also used in seven U.S. swing states?
Lead Stories rating: False Fact Check: NO Evidence Corrupted Software Was Used In Michigan; 6,000 Votes NOT ‘Stolen’ From Trump |
![]() |
Claim by Nevada Republican Party: Republicans in Nevada found “at least 3,062 instances of voter fraud. … Thousands of individuals have been identified who appear to have violated the law by casting ballots after they moved from NV.”
PolitiFact rating: False |
![]() |
Claim via Social Media: “Most of the victims of the Spanish flu didn’t die from the Spanish flu. They died from bacterial pneumonia. And the bacterial pneumonia was caused by […] wearing masks”
Health Feedback rating: Inaccurate |
![]() |
Claim by social media users: A deceased man cast a ballot by mail in Michigan
USA Today rating: False Fact check: False claim that deceased Michigan man voted in 2020 |
![]() |
(International: France) Claim: Discussion about Quran in French Parliament.. Quran: Root of all evil..License to kill !
BOOM rating: False No, This Video Does Not Show A Discussion On Quran In France’s Parliament |
Disclaimer: We are providing links to fact checks by third-party fact-checkers. If you do not agree with a fact check, please directly contact the source of that fact check.