24
Mostly False
Germany
Germans prioritize healthcare and infrastructure over climate spending, with significant drops in climate investment support since 2021 and increased demand for traditional infrastructure.
The claims regarding German public opinion on healthcare, climate investment, and infrastructure spending are based on statistical assertions. Evidence for these claims is not directly found, but some context is provided by web evidence, indicating substantial public investments in infrastructure and healthcare. A lack of direct survey data in the evidence necessitates cautious scoring, reflecting potential accuracy and reliability issues.
Individual Claims
28
Mostly False
Survey
91% of residents support increased spending on healthcare and the care system.
No direct survey evidence was found to verify the claim that 91% support increased healthcare spending. Existing data only provides general statistics on German healthcare spending.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
50
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
30
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
28
Evidence Summary
No direct survey evidence; general healthcare spending statistics available.
28
Mostly False
Survey
Support for climate investment has dropped by 20 percentage points since 2021.
No direct evidence confirming the exact drop in climate investment support. The evidence indicates significant climate spending but not public opinion changes.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
50
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
30
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
28
Evidence Summary
Reports on climate investment are available, but no public opinion data on changes.
28
Mostly False
Survey
Demand for traditional infrastructure like roads and bridges has risen by 23 percentage points since 2021.
While there is mention of increased infrastructure investment, no specific data on public demand or percentage changes are available. The claim remains unverified.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
50
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
30
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
28
Evidence Summary
Infrastructure investment data found; no survey on public demand rise.
28
Mostly False
Economics
About 66% of respondents believe new government spending should come from reallocating existing budgets.
No direct evidence found indicating the specific public opinion percentage regarding budget reallocation. General budget data available doesn't address this claim.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
50
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
30
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
28
Evidence Summary
General federal budget data, but no specific survey on public preference for reallocation.
9
False
Economics
Experts link the shift in priorities to economic uncertainty, inflation, and growing concerns about security.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
0
Source Quality Score
None
Source Quality Weight
0
Llm Reasoning Score
-1
Llm Reasoning Weight
100
Weighted Total
9
Evidence Summary
None