AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Dec 02 2019
News
Supreme Court shows little appetite for expanding gun rights in arguments over repealed New York regulation
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court seemed unlikely to deliver a major win for gun-rights activists during arguments on Monday in the first significant Second Amendment case the justices have heard in nearly a decade.
The case was challenging a New York City gun regulation that barred the transport of handguns outside of the city, even to a second home or firing range. After the court agreed
CNBCJan 21 2020
News
Supreme Court refuses for now to hear appeal of decision threatening Affordable Care Act
The Supreme Court refused Tuesday to decide on a fast-track basis the fate of the landmark Affordable Care Act, following a federal appeals court ruling that its central health insurance mandate is unconstitutional.
By refusing to step in now, the justices likely blocked the third Supreme Court test of the controversial health care law from an election-year docket already teeming with
USA TODAYSep 20 2013
News
House Votes To Cut Food Stamps By $40 Billion
The House of Representatives on Thursday approved sweeping reforms to the nations food stamp program that would cut some 40 billion in nutrition aid over 10 years and deny benefits to millions starting in 2014.
HuffPostJun 23 2020
News
Nadler prepares to subpoena Barr over firing of US attorney
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler is expected to issue a subpoena to compel Attorney General Bill Barr to testify before the panel on the firing of U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Geoffrey Berman, amid the committee’s broad investigation into the alleged “politicization” of the Trump Justice Department.
"We have begun the process to issue that
Fox News DigitalMar 31 2021
News
Wisconsin Supreme Court rules mask mandate invalid, scales back governor's ability to issue health orders
The Wisconsin Supreme Court on Wednesday blocked Democratic Gov. Tony Evers from issuing any new public health emergency orders to mandate face masks without the approval of the Republican-controlled state legislature.
In a 4-3 decision, conservative justices in the majority declared the statewide mask mandate invalid and ruled Evers exceeded his authority in issuing multiple
USA TODAYOct 01 2021
News
Far-Right Boogaloo Admits Posing as BLM Supporter While Shooting Up Minneapolis Cop Station
A member of the far-right Boogaloo Boys had admitted he traveled from Texas to Minneapolis in the wake of George Floyd’s death and posed as a Black Lives Matter supporter while wreaking havoc on the city. Ivan Harrison Hunter, 24, pleaded guilty Thursday to a single count of rioting. He admitted to firing 13 rounds from an AK-47-style rifle into the 3rd Precinct police station as rioters set
Daily BeastOct 08 2018
News
Exactly as Predicted — and How the Winning Kavanaugh Confirmation Struggle Next Plays Out
Justice Brett Kavanaugh will survive — and thrive.
The American SpectatorMay 12 2021
News
Gas prices hit 7-year high as Colonial Pipeline shutdown spurs panic buying
The national average gas price rose to a seven-year high on Wednesday, and four governors have declared states of emergency as the shutdown of the Colonial Pipeline spurred panic buying across the Southeast.
The shutdown of the biggest oil pipeline in the US due to a crippling cyberattack believed to be orchestrated by a Russia-based criminal group pushed Wednesday’s national average
New York Post (News)Sep 28 2012
Opinion
The Case for Competition in Medicare
Abstract: Rapidly rising Medicare spending is a major cause of the federal governments budget problems. Proposals to reform Medicare and slow its spending fall into one of two categories: more government micromanagement or empowerment of health care consumers in a functioning marketplace. Those who promote top-down spending controls optimistically assume that federal regulators can accomplish
The Heritage FoundationJul 19 2021
News
Florida man gets 8 months in prison in U.S. Capitol attack
A federal judge on Monday dealt an eight-month prison sentence to Paul Hodgkins for the Florida man’s role in the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol attack, making him the first among more than 500 people facing criminal charges in the riot to be incarcerated.
Hodgkins, 38, pleaded guilty on June 2 to one felony count of obstruction of an official proceeding, as Congress was in the process of
Axios