AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Apr 16 2019
News
Bernie Sanders boosted by Fox News town hall broadcast – live
The 2020 presidential candidate showed his brand of democratic socialism could have traction in Trump country
Here’s video of Sanders getting booed out of the auditorium unexpectedly cheered at every turn by they Fox News town hall audience.
How do you think a Sanders-Trump presidential debate would play out? Getting ahead of ourselves, you say? Maybe so. What other candidate on
The GuardianJun 17 2019
News
Inside Trump's plan to battle the 15 investigations facing him
Unlike most other candidates who face allegations of wrongdoing, he hopes to use them as part of a strategy that he hopes will help win him re-election.
President Donald Trump is facing a hurdle no other president has — an unprecedented onslaught of investigations into almost every recent organization he has led.
In California, investigators are examining some of the more than $
PoliticoJun 17 2019
Opinion
OPINION: The CIA Is Running Scared
Last Wednesday the intelligence community launched its first attack on Attorney General William Barr’s investigation into its illegal acts and abuses of power during the 2016 election. In a New York Times article entitled “Justice Department Seeks to Question CIA in its Own Russia Investigation,” the IC makes clear its fear of the results of Barr’s investigation of their spy operation on
Guest Writer - RightJul 08 2013
News
In Congress, Gridlock and Harsh Consequences
Despite finger-pointing news conferences and radio addresses by both parties on Capitol Hill, Congress let interest rates double last week on federally subsidized student loans. Eleven days earlier, a coalition of Democrats and conservative Republicans in the House scuttled the latest attempt at a farm bill, dooming for now disaster assistance for livestock producers still affected by last
New York Times (News)Jun 28 2012
News
Ruling Gives Obama Big Boost, Could Aid Romney
The Supreme Court's decision to uphold the federal health care law, President Barack Obama's signature legislative achievement, hands the White House a major legal victory just ahead of a tight presidential election. But the ruling also could energize Republicans, whose fierce opposition to the law propelled the issue to the high court.
Wall Street Journal (News)Sep 24 2019
Opinion
Mr. Trump, Blow Us Away With Your Transparency
Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, among President Trump’s staunchest defenders, has publicly — if gently — called on the president to “tell us as much as he can without compromising executive privilege, so that we can understand what happened.”
The senator is referring to a whistle-blower complaint with the inspector general of the intelligence community, Michael Atkinson,
Guest Writer - LeftJun 24 2012
News
Utah challenger a thorn in Hatch’s side
The former state senator has waged a no-holds-barred campaign against six-term incumbent Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, saying the veteran lawmaker failed to rein in federal spending, voted to approve nonessential programs without paying for them, and contributed to the $16 trillion national debt through years of inattention.
Washington TimesJun 23 2012
News
The Health PAC to Watch? Dentists
Though overshadowed by health-care behemoths such as the American Medical Association, dentists boasted the largest single health-care political-action committee, ADPAC, in 2008, according to the nonpartisan campaign-watchdog site OpenSecrets.org. The American Dental Association PAC gave more than $2 million to federal candidates and parties in that election.
Wall Street Journal (News)Oct 05 2014
News
Why the FCC will probably ignore the public on network neutrality
The flood of responses was "unprecedented." Since the early 20th century, agencies like the Federal Communications Commission have asked the public for comments before making big decisions. But in the past few months, the Commission received a deluge for one particular proceeding that could change the Internet as we know it.
The decision in question is on the fate of network neutrality
VoxMar 02 2013
Opinion
YOUNG: Washington still doesn’t get it
Washingtons fiscal problem can be succinctly summarized: Its the spending, Stupid. For anyone still doubting, you need look no further than the Congressional Budget Offices just-released estimates for the next decade. The verdict: Federal outlays spiked with the recession, remained high and will rise from there – even with their recent hike, revenues simply cannot keep pace.
Washington Times