Watch for these lies in Trump's State of the Union speech

Hmmm. What should President Trump talk about when he delivers his State of the Union speech to Congress on the night of February 4?

The embarrassing impeachment ordeal will probably be off-limits, since it would make no sense for Trump to refer to accusations of criminality before a prime-time audience. Instead, like other presidents, Trump will probably try to highlight accomplishments during his three years in office—especially in the economy, which is solid and could help Trump’s reelection bid.

Trump can legitimately claim the economy is doing well. We’re in the 11th year of the longest expansion on record. Unemployment is at a 50-year low. Stocks are close to record highs. And there’s no hint of recession.

Yet Trump seems unable to resist lies and exaggerations. When he gave a speech on the economy in November, Yahoo Finance tallied 22 glaring lies on trade, jobs, interest rates, wages and Trump’s record compared with President Obama’s. His main thrust seemed to be taking credit for economic developments that were likely to happen anyway. If the pattern holds, Trump will probably repeat some of those lies in his State of the Union address. Here are some whoppers to watch for:

Under Obama, 5 million people left the labor force. In Obama’s first month in office, the labor force was 154.2 million. In Obama’s last month, the labor force was 159.7 million. That’s a gain of 5.5 million, not a loss.

“In 2016, the Department of Labor predicted that Americans would continue dropping out of the workforce in record numbers.” No, it didn’t. It predicted the labor force would rise from 156 million in 2016 to 168 million by 2026. Trump also distorts Labor Dept. projections for the unemployment rate, which it saw falling to 4.7% by 2026.

The Federal Reserve under Trump has executed a “near record number of rate increases.” Not even close. The Fed has raised interest rates 7 times during the Trump presidency, a quarter point each time. From 2004 to 2006, the Fed hiked rates 17 times. During the 1970s, the Fed raised short-term rates for seven straight years, from 4.65% to 19.85%.

“We have added nearly $10 trillion of value to our economy.” GDP was $19.2 trillion when Trump took office, and it’s $21.7 trillion now. That’s a gain of $2.5 trillion, not $10 trillion.

“Under my administration, [median income] rose $5,000.” Census data shows median household incomes have risen from $62,626 to $63,179 since Trump has been in office. That’s just $553. The data ends in 2018, but another 11 months won’t account for that extra $4,447 Trump tossed in.