Posts Share on Facebook President Donald Trump alleges that he has banned the Atlantic from the White House briefing room.
Screenshots captured via Facebook
Verdict: False
The claim is false and originally derived from a March 26 post shared by America’s Last Line of Defense, a satirical Facebook page. Additionally, a White House spokesman has denied the validity of the email claim to confirm your facts.
Fact check:
The Atlantic has released a full signal thread that includes journalists incorrectly in the debate about the military strike that the Trump administration intended, CNBC. Aside from the name of one Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) officer, the text has not been edited, CNBC reported, citing the Atlantic.
A Facebook post claims Trump allegedly banned the Atlantic from the White House briefing room. “Trump banned the “Atlantic” from the White House briefing room: “They’re fake news from con artists,” reads posts that don’t provide a source to support that claim.
The claim is false and originally derived from a Posted on March 26th It is shared by America’s Last Line of Defense, a satirical Facebook page. Facebook Page I’ll explain it Before repeating “Nothing on this page is real,” you are yourself as the “flagship of the Trolley for cash and the Arrow Network of Propaganda.” The original post has over 1,000 likes at the time of writing! I received it.
The post also includes a link to Recent Articles From the Dunning Kruger Times, where he repeats his claims. “Dunning Kruger Times” is a subsidiary “America’s last line of defense.” (Related: No, Pete Hegses did not remove Colin Powell’s name from the list of prominent Americans buried in Arlington)
Similarly, Trump Not displayed I have it I commented publicly About the claim. White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt Not addressed Claim. No claims mentioned in the Atlantic Website Or verifying it Social media account. Check out the facts you found There are no reliable news reports Also to support claims.
Additionally, a White House spokesman has denied the validity of the email claim to confirm your facts.
“[This claim is] It’s not true,” the spokesman said.