AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Jan 20 2022
Opinion
Biden’s Year of Failure
Of all the many unbidden iniquities that have dogged President Biden since he took office, perhaps the most unjust of all is that bad things keep happening to the man after he has done something stupid. The phenomenon has been near Newtonian in its consistency. The president blows the Afghanistan withdrawal; his poll numbers crater in response. The president chases an agenda that he knows
National Review (News)Aug 27 2020
News
Manhattan DA says Trump does not deserve immunity
NEW YORK – Manhattan’s top prosecutor told a U.S. appeals court on Thursday he should be able to obtain Donald Trump’s tax returns, saying the U.S. president should not be allowed to effectively immunize himself from a criminal probe by pursuing an appeal that “stands no chance of success.”
Cyrus Vance, the Manhattan district attorney, made the argument in a filing with the 2nd U.S.
San Jose Mercury NewsJun 26 2021
News
Justice Department announces challenge to Georgia's restrictive voting law
The Justice Department announced Friday that it is suing the state of Georgia over its recently enacted voting restrictions.
"Our complaint alleges that recent changes to Georgia’s election laws were enacted with the purpose of denying or abridging the right of Black Georgians to vote on account of their race or color in violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act,” Attorney General
NBC News (Online)Nov 02 2020
Analysis
The radical Texas lawsuit seeking to disenfranchise 127,000 voters, explained
In a normal world, where judges respect both the sanctity of elections and the rule of law, Hotze v. Hollins would be laughed out of court.
But we live in a world with a 6-3 Republican Supreme Court that appears eager to rewrite longstanding rules that have governed American elections for at least a century. And the Hotze case itself will be heard by Judge Andrew Hanen — as my colleague
VoxFeb 02 2021
News
Putin critic Navalny jailed in Russia despite protests
A Moscow court has jailed Putin critic Alexei Navalny for three-and-a-half years for violating the conditions of a suspended sentence.
He has been in detention since returning to Russia last month. He had been treated in Germany for a near-fatal nerve agent attack against him in August.
Thousands of supporters have rallied across Russia in support of Mr Navalny.
His
BBC NewsOct 14 2020
News
Judge Amy Coney Barrett flips the script on Democrats over health care, notes when she adopted daughter
Democrats grilled Amy Coney Barrett on health care Tuesday and the Supreme Court nominee responded by sharing her family's own personal story of access to health care.
Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., brought up the fear that his constituents have about potentially losing the protections under the Affordable Care Act if the Supreme Court strikes down the President Obama-era law during an
Fox News DigitalNov 05 2021
News
Analyst Who Reported Trump’s ‘Pee Tape’ Rumor Was Just Arrested
Federal law enforcement have arrested Igor Danchenko, a Russian analyst who reported the infamous “pee tape” rumor involving President Donald Trump.
Danchenko was the primary researcher on what’s become known as the Steele dossier—a litany of allegations against the former president and his campaign, namely that they conspired with Russian intelligence to defeat Hillary Clinton.
ViceFeb 04 2022
News
Revealed: Trump reviewed draft order that authorized voting machines to be seized
Weeks after the 2020 election, Donald Trump reviewed a draft executive order that authorized the national guard to seize voting machines and verbally agreed to appoint Sidney Powell, a campaign lawyer and conspiracy theorist, as special counsel to investigate election fraud.
The two previously unreported actions of the former president – which is certain to interest the House select
The GuardianJul 23 2021
News
Federal Prosecutors Are Branding Non-Violent Jan 6 Defendants As ‘Terrorists’ To Pursue Harsher Sentences
Federal prosecutors are attempting to pursue harsher sentences for those arrested for non-violent crimes in connection with the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol by branding them as terrorists while acknowledging their actions don’t meet the legal definition of terrorism.
Court documents first flagged by independent journalist Michael Tracey from the case of Paul Hodgkins, the first Jan. 6
The Daily CallerSep 30 2021
News
Nebraska says it opposes IRS snooping in Biden’s $3.5T spending plan
As if this bill didn’t have enough problems …
Hidden in President Biden’s $3.5 trillion budget plan is a provision that would authorize the Internal Revenue Service to snoop on Americans’ bank accounts.
Nebraska state Treasurer John Murante said his state is leading the charge in objecting to the proposal that would compel banks to report private customers’ accounts with at
New York Post (News)