Tracking the record of President Barack Obama.
When Barack Obama took office as the 44th president of the United States, PolitiFact created an unprecedented database of his 533 campaign promises. Weâve spent the past eight years amassing the definitive account of his record.
All 533 promises Obama made during his campaigns
Hover over a dot for details on the promise. Click to read the report.
Source: PolitiFact API ELI MURRAY | Times
Obama had several overarching priorities: Get the economy back on track, impose new regulations on the financial sector, pass a health care plan, overhaul immigration law and address climate change.
As his presidency concludes, PolitiFactâs Obameter shows 48 percent of his promises rated Promise Kept, while another 28 percent were part of a Compromise. He broke 24 percent of them.
When he had Democratic majorities in the House and Senate in 2009, Obama got a lot done. He signed into law three major pieces of legislation: a massive economic stimulus package called the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, the financial regulations known as Dodd-Frank and the health care law formally known as the Affordable Care Act, more often called Obamacare. When Obama lost unified government in the 2010 election, bills on immigration and climate change were left undone. The Democrats never regained power, and Obama had trouble pushing through his agenda. His decision to use executive power infuriated Republicans in Congress and prompted challenges in court. But it also helped him follow through on a number of things he promised voters.
This project explores Obamaâs legacy with in-depth reports on his promises about the economy, Iraq and Afghanistan, health care, climate change, drug sentencing, taxes and bipartisanship.
Obamaâs successes and failures highlight both the fractious nature of Washington and the fragility of a presidentâs influence and legacy. His record holds lessons for voters, the next Congress and the new president, who campaigned on promises to unwind Obamaâs signature achievements.
Hover over a brick to see details of each promise. Click to read the report. (Some promises are duplicated because they are about more than one subject.)
Uncouth_Troglodyte on June 2nd, 2017 at 01:08 UTC »
You should do this for every president (or at least the last 10 or so terms).
It'd be interesting to see.
remzem on June 2nd, 2017 at 00:48 UTC »
That one cracks me up.
AuditorTux on June 1st, 2017 at 19:18 UTC »
My only complaint is that not every promise is made equal. The promise to expand LGBT rights, for example, was sold much harder than encouraging videotaping in capital cases.
That said, the visualization is quite nice.