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PolitiFact Florida is live fact-checking the first 2024 presidential debate between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump at 9 p.m. ET, June 27.
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Donald Trump was president when Black poverty and unemployment reached record lows. owever, Trump leaves out that his opponent, President Joe Biden, saw both of those record lows surpassed on his watch.
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How does Biden鈥檚 position on Israel and Gaza compare with his 2024 presidential opponent, former President Donald Trump?
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A fact-checked guide to how Biden and Trump might answer questions on important voter topics, including the economy, immigration and health care in the first presidential debate on June 27.
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President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump both support same-sex marriage, but have diverging views when it comes to LGBTQ+ people serving in the military and youth access to gender-affirming care. Ahead of the first presidential debate, PolitiFact FL looks into their stances.
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Video footage shows an air show in Miami over Memorial Day weekend, not a U.S. aircraft responding to Russian warships in the Caribbean in June.
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Sen. Marco Rubio has recently claimed that the population of illegal immigrants that are living in the U.S. have doubled from 11 million to upwards of 30 million. Data from different immigration groups says otherwise.
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Florida Congressman Byron Donalds, a prominent Donald Trump supporter, tried to attract Black voters to Trump's side but drew criticism from Democrats after making a comparison involving the Jim Crow era.
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President Joe Biden鈥檚 immigration proclamation bars migrants who illegally cross the U.S.-Mexico border from seeking asylum when the number of border crossings reach a certain level. Some legal avenues of entry remain available for migrants.
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In Trump鈥檚 home state of Florida, where he is registered to vote, the Department of State website says that "a felony conviction in another state makes a person ineligible to vote in Florida only if the conviction would make the person ineligible to vote in the state where the person was convicted."
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PolitiFact provides some answers to the many legal questions coming out of Trump's New York convictions and his bid for the presidency.
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PolitiFact fact-checks several of the former president's statements and claims about his New York case.