The fact-checking website Snopes changed one of its ratings after pressure from President Joe Biden’s administration, newly disclosed emails show.
Under a heading of “what’s true,” Snopes said, “The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), a federal agency, is currently considering a ban on gas stoves if they can’t be made safer, due to concerns over harmful indoor pollutants that cause health and respiratory problems.”
Under another heading, it said that the ban has not been put in place.
“We would appreciate a correction to this story,” Ms. Springs said.
Mr. Ibrahim responded the following day, saying Snopes would “correct the article.”
Snopes then changed the fact-check rating from “mixture” to “false.”
The CPSC “is not currently considering a ban on gas stoves, though a commissioner said ‘anything is on the table’ if they can’t be made safer,” the updated article states.
“Nice!! So helpful going forward,” Mr. Kikukawa responded.
Mr. Kikuwaka told Ms. Springs in another email that the White House would be circulating a statement “making clear POTUS does not support banning gas stoves” and sharing social media posts from the commission and Mr. Trumka. “Will also be pushing people your way,” he wrote.
The emails were obtained by the Functional Government Initiative nonprofit through the Freedom of Information Act.
“A commissioner appointed by President Biden wanted to ban gas stoves, and he got caught, provoking a public outcry,“ Pete McGinnis, spokesman for the nonprofit, said in a statement. ”So, the CPSC staff leaned on Snopes, seeking to counter the narrative by splitting hairs about commission processes. And the White House finds this ‘helpful.’ Helpful with what? This goes beyond dysfunction—the government using sympathetic media to censor inconvenient news. The American people deserve both to keep their gas stoves and to know the truth about what regulations government officials are considering.”
Closer to Ban
The CPSC framed the possibility of banning stoves as solely on Mr. Trumka, issuing a statement from Alexander Hoehn-Saric, the chairman of the commission.“I am not looking to ban gas stoves and the CPSC has no proceeding to do so,” he said.
At the same time, CPSC officials acknowledged that they were investigating emissions from gas stoves and were “exploring new ways to address any health risks.”
The Committee to Unleash Prosperity, which obtained the memo, said that it proved that the administration “intended to ban gas stoves.”