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Orgo-Life the new way to the future Advertising by AdpathwayPolitiFact, the Poynter Institute’s fact-checking website, said farewell to its annual “Lie of the Year” selection on Monday and decided to name 2025 the “Year of the Lies” instead.
PolitiFact editor-in-chief Katie Sanders explained that while the site typically drops a year-end report to “recognize a statement, collection of statements or theme that is worthy of note for a consequential undermining of reality,” the process of singling out just one lie in such an abysmal year for truth seemed insufficient.
“We are stepping back this year and recalibrating the Lie of the Year — focusing less on the offenders who perpetuate the falsehoods, and more on those who are hurt by them,” Sanders wrote in a post to the site.
For the first time since 2009, PolitiFact is recalibrating the Lie of the Year — our award for the most egregious falsehood we've seen in a year's worth of fact-checking.This year, we want to focus less on the offenders who perpetuate the falsehoods, and more on those who are hurt by them. 🧵
— PolitiFact (@politifact.bsky.social) 2025-12-15T13:00:31.899ZPolitiFact readers were asked to pick from several choices for this year’s “Lie of the Year,” a title the site has used since 2009. Among the selections were President Donald Trump’s “pants on fire” justification for boat strikes off the Venezuelan coast, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s talk of “no starvation” in Gaza and White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s claim that the president’s tariffs were a “tax cut” for Americans.
But PolitiFact opted to instead focus on these three stories:
- A North Dakota farmer’s struggles that were sparked by Trump’s trade war with China.
- How the Trump administration’s medical claims disrupted a Florida pediatrician’s practice.
- Two brothers who fled gang violence in El Salvador and came to the U.S. as children “only to be suddenly shackled, detained and deported” earlier this year despite their history of complying with immigration check-ins.
Sanders, in a conversation with Tom Jones on “The Poynter Report Podcast,” stressed the toll that misinformation took on people’s lives in 2025.
“We are kind of going back to basics and affirming that facts matter and words matter, and we’re going to show people why. We’re going to show that lies are powerful and they have consequences on real people,” Sanders said.
You can read more on PolitiFact’s approach to naming 2025 the “Year of the Lies” here.


6 months ago
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