AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Mar 05 2013
News
2012 blame game: Will it ever end?
Four months after taking an electoral pounding, Republicans cant agree on what went wrong in 2012  let alone on a path to recovery.
PoliticoSep 30 2021
News
How millennials and Gen Z are remaking the GOP
Ariel Hill-Davis likes to jokingly refer to herself as a “geriatric millennial.” She’s a Republican, but as a self-proclaimed “hardcore moderate” she’s been called a RINO (Republican in name only) pretty much since the moment she entered the political sphere in 2008.
Through her work with Republican Women for Progress, Hill-Davis, who lives in Washington, D.C., is hoping to reshape the
Deseret NewsSep 08 2012
News
Post-convention campaigns take off with focus on economy
Over the next 60 days of campaigning, much of it focusing on key battleground states, the two men will pitch their visions for the country to a divided electorate.
CNN DigitalNov 02 2021
News
Terry McAuliffe, Glenn Youngkin in Dead Heat in Virginia Governor’s Race
Virginians headed to the polls Tuesday to elect a new governor in a tight race that is being closely watched as a gauge of the national political mood.
Polls show former Democratic Gov. Terry McAuliffe and Republican Glenn Youngkin, a former private-equity executive, are running neck-and-neck to succeed Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam. Virginia governors are barred from serving
Wall Street Journal (News)May 22 2019
Opinion
OPINION: A new folly of identity politics: 'Separate but equal' commencements
During commencement season, young people across the country enjoy the ceremony marking the completion of their college career, attaining degrees reflecting their interest in ideas, innovation, art, sciences and the myriad of courses offered by American academies.
But the camaraderie inherent and necessary as part of the college experience is under attack by a familiar foe: identity
Guest Writer - RightJun 10 2021
News
Florida education board OKs rule banning critical race theory
The Florida Board of Education on Thursday approved a rule from Gov. Ron DeSantis that bans critical race theory curriculum in the Sunshine State's schools.
Education officials voted 8-0 to OK the rule during a meeting at Florida State College at Jacksonville that DeSantis attended virtually.
The rule states: "Instruction on the required topics must be factual and objective and
Washington ExaminerFeb 04 2021
News
Leaders of the anti-vaccine movement used 'Stop the Steal' crusade to advance their own conspiracy theories
As the Trump faithful gathered around the Capitol on January 6, two conspiracy theories peddling in government mistrust converged: The fraudulent belief that the election was stolen, and the dangerous narrative that Covid-19 vaccinations are wildly unsafe.
"We're being led off of a cliff," Del Bigtree, an anti-vaccine activist, told the crowd at the "MAGA Freedom Rally D.C." about a
CNN DigitalFeb 05 2020
News
CNN to host two straight nights of Democratic town halls before NH primary
CNN announced Friday it will host eight Democratic presidential town halls over a two-night period from New Hampshire ahead of the party's first primary slated for Feb. 11.
The network format has candidates appearing back-to-back on Feb. 5 and 6. Questions will come from either a CNN moderator or the audience at Saint Anselm College. Moderators will be announced at a later date.
The HillNov 02 2021
News
US gives final clearance to COVID-19 shots for kids 5 to 11
CDC Director Rochelle Walensky on Tuesday signed off on the use of the Pfizer vaccine for children ages 5 to 11 just hours after an agency panel OK’d the shot — paving the way for an estimated 28 million young kids to begin getting their jabs as soon as this week.
The final approval comes after a panel of doctors and public-health experts forming the federal Centers for Disease Control
New York Post (News)Nov 23 2021
News
Thomas Jefferson statue removed from NYC City Hall because former US president, author of Declaration of Independence owned slaves
A statue of Thomas Jefferson — America's third president and the author of the Declaration of Independence — was removed Monday from City Hall in New York City, where it stood for nearly two centuries, because Jefferson was a slave owner, the New York Post reported.
What are the details?
About a dozen art handlers with Marshall Fine Arts spent several hours carefully removing the
The Blaze