AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Jul 20 2017
News
Trump supporters still fixate on Clinton as mood darkens
As Trump falters, supporters in a Pennsylvania county that swung Republican in 2016 blame the media for his woes and insist Hillary Clinton would be worse.
The GuardianJun 08 2020
Headline Roundup
Top Philadelphia Inquirer Editor Resigns After Controversy Over "Buildings Matter, Too" Headline
The Philadelphia Inquirer's executive editor resigned this week following controversy over a recent column published by the paper. Initially titled "Buildings Matter, Too," the article decried property damage in the wake of protests and riots. The paper apologized after running the headline, and changed it to "Damaging buildings disproportionately hurts the people protesters are trying to
New York Daily News Associated Press The Daily CallerNov 12 2020
News
McConnell treads cautiously in Trump's post-election fight
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) is walking a fine line with his handling of President Trump’s refusal to concede the election.
The GOP leader is defending Trump’s right to challenge the vote counts in several key battleground states, arguing the courts are meant to handle disputed election results and that “wealthy media corporations” should not project the winner.
The HillOct 13 2016
News
How the Overstuffed GOP Primary Field Led to Trump’s Victory
There are many theories for Trump’s rise, but the simplest is the truest. Celebrity populism combined with media support helped him win a divided field. He started from a base of around 20 percent, a number similar to past fringe candidates. He was then lifted to front-runner status with his media advantage. Unlike previous front-runners, he never came under attack in a way that would have
National Review (News)Jul 17 2013
News
DOJ trolling for email tips in Zimmerman probe
More than a year after an FBI report indicated there was no evidence of racial bias in George Zimmerman's history, the Justice Department is trolling for email tips on the former neighborhood watch volunteer as it weighs a possible federal civil rights case against him. Amid pressure from the NAACP and several Democratic lawmakers to pursue Zimmerman, the department has set up a public email
Fox News DigitalJul 17 2017
News
Poll: Two-thirds of Americans disapprove of President Trump's Twitter habit
A majority of Americans do not approve of how President Trump uses his favorite social media platform, according to a new poll out Monday.
USA TODAYDec 03 2018
News
After Trump summit, no mention in China of 90-day deadline or trade concessions
China seems to have a markedly different view of the trade war cease-fire reached with the Trump administration over the weekend, with state media making no mention Monday of a 90-day time frame or a reduction in tariffs on imported American cars — or indeed any specifics about buying more American products.
Washington PostAug 11 2023
Headline Roundup
U.S. Women’s Early FIFA Exit Highlights Political Division and Culture War
The U.S. women’s World Cup team - which is known for being politically outspoken - was upset by Sweden this week, drawing mixed media reactions.
Roster & Parity: An opinion for Vox (Left bias) criticized conservatives, including Former President Donald Trump and Benny Johnson for describing the women’s team as “woke” and gloating over their elimination. It compared conservative
Vox Fort Worth Star-Telegram National Review (News)Nov 10 2020
Analysis
Were those Biden victory celebrations coronavirus superspreader events? Health experts ‘extremely concerned’ they could be
After Joe Biden was projected the winner of the 2020 presidential election by the Associated Press on Saturday, videos and images of people dancing and cheering in the streets of New York, D.C. and cities around the country began flooding social media.
Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University who previously served as Baltimore’s
MarketWatchSep 09 2021
Opinion
How a story about ivermectin and hospital beds went wrong
Last week, KFOR, a local news outlet in Oklahoma, published a story that contained some terrifying information: so many people in the state were hospitalized due to overdoses of ivermectin—a drug originally designed for horses, which some anti-vaccine sources have promoted (incorrectly) as a defense against COVID-19—that there was no room in intensive-care units for other patients, including
Columbia Journalism Review