{"ok":true,"report":{"slug":"3pyOxFK8","publishedAt":1780107327411,"post":{"text":"This is what it looks like when the LEFT is in control. Biden had 2 consecutive quarters of negative growth also. But it wasn't called a recession because he was a DEMOCRAT!","uri":"at://did:plc:hrgpfvsjuyphsuso5cijqpcr/app.bsky.feed.post/3mmzwwp2u6c2q","authorHandle":"demannihilator.bsky.social"},"verdict":{"verdict":"Misleading","confidence":78,"summary":"The post mixes accurate facts with a misleading causal claim. Biden did have two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth in 2022, and Canada has recently experienced two consecutive quarters of annualized GDP contraction under Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney. However, the claim that Biden's situation wasn't called a recession 'because he was a Democrat' is false—the non-partisan NBER uses a broader definition of recession that considers multiple indicators (employment, income, industrial production), not just GDP, and determined the U.S. was not in recession in 2022 because other economic indicators remained strong.","claims":[{"claim":"The chart shows Canadian GDP growth with recent negative quarters under 'LEFT' control","assessment":"Partially accurate. Canada is currently led by Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney (elected April 2025). Statistics Canada reported on May 29, 2026 that Q4 2025 GDP contracted ~1% annualized and Q1 2026 contracted ~0.1% annualized, which the chart roughly reflects. Whether this constitutes a 'recession' is debated among economists, with some calling it a 'technical recession' on an annualized basis while noting quarter-over-quarter GDP was essentially flat."},{"claim":"Biden had 2 consecutive quarters of negative growth","assessment":"True. The U.S. economy posted negative GDP growth in Q1 and Q2 of 2022, a widely reported fact confirmed by Bureau of Economic Analysis data."},{"claim":"Biden's negative growth wasn't called a recession because he was a Democrat","assessment":"Misleading/False. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)—a private, non-partisan research organization—officially determines U.S. recessions. Its definition requires 'a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy lasting more than a few months,' considering employment, income, consumer spending, and industrial production alongside GDP. In 2022, strong job growth and other indicators led the NBER to conclude no recession occurred. This is a methodological determination, not a partisan one."}],"caveats":"The chart's exact figures cannot be independently verified against official Statistics Canada releases, though the general pattern of recent negative annualized growth aligns with reported data. Whether Canada is technically in a 'recession' depends on which definition is used (two consecutive quarters of annualized decline vs. quarter-over-quarter decline vs. broader indicators). The post's political framing ('LEFT in control') is opinion, not a factual claim.","sources":[{"title":"Canada slips into technical recession as economic growth stalled in 1st quarter","url":"https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/recession-gdp-may-2026-statscan-9.7216352"},{"title":"Recession | U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)","url":"https://www.bea.gov/help/glossary/recession"},{"title":"U.S. likely didn't slip into recession in early 2022 despite negative GDP growth","url":"https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2022/0802"},{"title":"Special election victories give Canada's Carney a majority government | AP News","url":"https://apnews.com/article/carney-canada-special-elections-trump-304cca23cd562e911002aa2c83f19fb2"}]},"communityNote":"Misleading. The U.S. had two negative GDP quarters in 2022, but the non-partisan NBER did not declare a recession. It uses a broader definition that weighs employment and income, which remained strong. Official recession calls rely on comprehensive economic data, not political affiliation.","sourceUrl":"https://www.dallasfed.org/research/economics/2022/0802"}}