AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
May 28 2015
News
Will Democrats keep hammering the Kochs?
As the Senate's top Democrat, Harry Reid has loved nothing more than attacking the Koch brothers and their influence over politics.
Now Democrats have to decide how to wage that battle without him.
Heading into last year's elections, the Nevada Democrat delighted in repeatedly slamming Charles and David Koch -- using the Senate floor to call them "un-American" and accuse them of
CNN (Online News)Nov 05 2014
Opinion
The Democratic Party Needs Its Soul Back
Republicans seem to have convinced the average American that what is good for billionaires, oil and gas companies, pharmaceutical companies, health insurance companies, banks, chemical companies and defense contractors is good for them. With this midterm election, we gave the country over lock, stock and barrel to our new corporate overlords.
We watched this disaster approach in slow
HuffPostNov 08 2012
News
Back to Work, Obama Is Greeted by Looming Crisis
Newly re-elected, President Obama moved quickly on Wednesday to open negotiations with Congressional Republican leaders over the main unfinished business of his term  a major deficit-reduction deal to avert a looming fiscal crisis  as he began preparing for a second term that will include significant cabinet changes.
New York Times (News)Mar 26 2019
News
Democrats' soured view of Rod Rosenstein diminishes complex role he played in Mueller probe
Liberals thought deputy attorney general was their Trump-slayer, conservatives once wanted him impeached.
For nearly two years, Democrats figured Rod Rosenstein was their man in the Mueller investigation. They fought vehemently to keep him from being fired. They even went to court to try to make him acting attorney general.
Republicans, meanwhile, were so furious with the deputy
Washington TimesNov 13 2019
News
New RNC Data Proves Americans Are Better Off Than They Were Three Years Ago
As Democrats continue with their impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump, one thing is increasingly clear: the Democratic Party is worried about their ability to beat Trump in 2020. Voters go to the polls in the Iowa Caucus in less than 12 weeks and the Democratic field is still fairly packed.
The Trump campaign is focused on reminding the American people of promises the
TownhallFeb 26 2024
Headline Roundup
Should Social Media Companies Be Allowed to Censor Political Speech?
The future of online speech is being scrutinized by the Supreme Court as it hears two landmark cases.
For Context: These lawsuits arose out of Florida and Texas laws enacted in 2021, which restrict tech companies' ability to censor political content they find objectionable. Advocates argue they shield the First Amendment rights of users, particularly conservatives, from what they
Los Angeles Times BBC News Wall Street Journal (Opinion)Jul 16 2019
News
Trump fires back at Squad, challenges House to ‘rebuke’ them for ‘filthy and hate laced’ language
President Trump fired back Tuesday at the four freshman congresswomen who denounced his administration and renewed calls for his impeachment at a rare joint press conference, claiming Democrats have given them a "free pass" for their "vile" language and challenging colleagues to rebuke them.
House Democrats, in fact, are planning to formally rebuke Trump for weekend tweets urging those
Fox News (Online News)Mar 25 2019
News
'America is the greatest place on Earth': Trump finds new lease with Mueller vindication
After two years under investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller, the good news was delivered to President Trump Sunday by his team of attorneys and staff at his private quarters at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida.
No collusion with Russia, no charges of obstructing justice.
“This is very good,” Mr. Trump said upon hearing the news.
The president and his advisers
Washington TimesMar 25 2019
News
With Mueller report in, nothing's over. But for Trump, everything has changed
Special counsel Robert Mueller, whose investigation in large part has defined the first half of President Trump's tenure, was spied in front of the White House on Sunday morning as he and his wife walked across Lafayette Square toward St. John's Episcopal Church.
The former FBI director looked, finally, relaxed.
That wasn't exactly the impact his long-awaited and confidential
USA TODAYOct 30 2014
News
Maine gov.: Negotiations with nurse in Ebola quarantine have failed, will use legal authority
Maine Gov. Paul LePage said Thursday he is ready to use the “full extent of his authority” to rein in a 33-year-old nurse who worked with Ebola patients in West Africa but balked at a deal that would prevent her from entering public spaces.
The Republican, who is up for re-election Tuesday, said state attorneys tried to work with Kaci Hickox, of Fort Kent, but those negotiations “have
Washington Times