Skip to content

Lying in politics is a danger to democracy. Can it be fixed?

(Photo courtesy Bill Adair)

The “L-word.” It took some time for journalists to call a lie a lie when politicians uttered provable falsehoods. After all, don’t all politicians stretch the truth when it comes to policies, opponents or their own accomplishments?

Bill Adair, an award-winning journalist and educator, shares his thoughts and experiences in his book “Beyond the Big Lie: The Epidemic of Political Lying, Why Republicans Do It More, and How It Could Burn Down Our Democracy.” The creator of PolitiFact, the Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking site, and co-founder of the International Fact-Checking Network has ideas about the problem — and possible remedies. Adair is a professor of journalism and public policy at Duke University and a leader in the effort to combat misinformation. And, at the end of a year chock-full of election rhetoric to analyze, he is my guest and guide on Equal Time.

Recent Stories

Trump hits cultural issues in midterms pep talk to Turning Point crowd

Former House member David McKinley dies at 79

Resign of the times  — Congressional Hits and Misses

A week of lots of noise, few results in Congress

RFK Jr. distances himself from measles outbreak, bashes Tylenol study

Senate sends short-term surveillance reauthorization to Trump