IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Fact-checking the seventh Republican debate

Seven GOP candidates duked it out on Thursday night, but how true were their claims?
Presidential candidates Rand Paul, Chris Christie, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush and John Kasich appear before a Republican presidential primary debate on Jan. 28, 2016, in Des Moines, Iowa. (Photo by Chris Carlson/AP)
Presidential candidates Rand Paul, Chris Christie, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush and John Kasich appear before a Republican presidential primary debate on Jan. 28, 2016, in Des Moines, Iowa.

Seven Republican presidential candidates duked it out on issues ranging from immigration to ethanol mandates during Thursday night's primetime debate on Fox News. But there was one notably absent voice: Donald Trump. But that did not mean the GOP frontrunner was expempt from fact-checkers.

NBC News' partner Politifact took a look at how the candidates stacked up against their "Truth-O-Meter" scale.

Claim One: Sen. Ted Cruz has never insulted Donald Trump

Kicking off the debate, Sen. Cruz said that he never "insulted Donald personally."

PolitiFact points out that defining a comment as an "'insult' is somewhat in the eye of the beholder." But the recent shots fired between both candidates on the campaign trail makes Cruz's statement rank as "Mostly False."

Claim Two: Sen. Marco Rubio has not flipped on amnesty

Once again, Sen. Rubio was confronted about whether he flip-flopped on immigration after an unearthed clip showed him declaring his opposition to "blanket amnesty" in 2008.

Megyn Kelly asked Rubio, "Within two years of getting elected, you were co-sponsoring legislation to create a path to citizenship, in your words, amnesty. Haven't you already proven that you cannot be trusted on this issue?"

Rubio responded by saying that he never supported blanket amnesty as a coauthor of the "Gang of Eight" bill. PolitiFact rates that statement as true since the legislation had "significant hurdles including fines and a waiting period."

But did Rubio flip flop? Somewhat.

Claim Three: Gov. Chris Christie blames neighbors for knowing about San Bernardino

San Bernardino stands as a real example of domestic terrorism, a troubling thought for Gov. Chris Christie, who blamed the attackers' neighbors for not reporting suspicious activity to police.

"These folks had weapons, they knew that they were talking about trying to take our country and attack it," Christie said. "That's not profiling, that's law enforcement."

PolitiFact rates the comment as flat out false. They found that there is "no mention that a neighbor of the shooters themselves was suspicious, much less that a neighbor thought an attack was being planned."

Claim Four: President Barack Obama "degraded" the U.S. military

Sen. Cruz blamed the administration's weak terrorism strategy on the president's decision to slash military spending.

"Barack Obama, right now, No.1, over seven years has dramatically degraded our military," he said.

PolitiFact points out that while there is a small element of truth to Cruz's statement, Democrats and Republicans are to blame for the failed budget negotiations that could have increased spending.

Since Congress is the only branch who can allocate a budget, PolitiFact rates the comment "Mostly False."

Claim Five: Donald Trump "never once asked" for Megyn Kelly's removal

Prior to Trump's debate protest event for veterans, the billionaire told CNN that he "never once asked" Fox News to remove Megyn Kelly as a moderator. Instead, he blamed a scathing Fox News press release as the final straw.

PolitiFact found three iterations of Trump saying that Kelly "should not be allowed" at the debate. His statement received a "False" rating.

This article originally appeared on NBCNews.com.