AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Feb 18 2020
News
Pompeo Responds to Reports Democrats Secretly Met Iran's Javad Zarif
Speaking to reporters during a joint press conference with Ethiopian Foreign Minister Gedu Andargachew Tuesday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo responded to reporting that a number of Democrat Senators secretly met with Iranian Javad Zarif during the Munich Security Conference.
“I have seen that piece about some senators meeting with Foreign Minister Zarif. This guy is designated by the
TownhallApr 12 2019
Opinion
Julian Assange’s Arrest Should Worry Anyone Who Cares About Freedom of the Press
Julian Assange’s strange seven-year residence in Ecuador’s London embassy has ended, and Assange, thanks to the American president he helped elect, is now in British custody facing a US extradition request. The question now is what the freshly unsealed Trump Justice Department indictment against him means, and doesn’t mean—for Assange, for the British courts, which must decide whether to hand
The NationMay 01 2015
News
Body found in suitcase, but officials don't know if it's missing Provo woman
Human remains were located in a suitcase along a freeway Thursday, the Utah Highway Patrol reported.
The remains were located by Utah Department of Transportation workers on I-80 near the Saltair resort just before 3 p.m. The large s
Deseret NewsNov 26 2019
News
Former White House counsel Donald McGahn must comply with House subpoena, judge rules
Former Trump White House counsel Donald McGahn must comply with a House subpoena, a federal court ruled Monday, finding that “no one is above the law” and that top presidential advisers cannot ignore congressional demands for information. The ruling raises the possibility that McGahn could be forced to testify as part of the impeachment inquiry.
U.S. District Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson
Washington PostNov 26 2019
News
‘Presidents are not kings’: Judge says ex-White House counsel Donald McGahn must testify before Congress
Former White House counsel Donald McGahn, a key figure with firsthand knowledge of President Donald Trump's alleged efforts to short-circuit the Mueller investigation, must testify before Congress, a federal judge ruled Monday.
The ruling, which the Justice Department said it will appeal, affirms Congress' role as a check on executive power. If upheld, it could open the door for
USA TODAYJun 09 2014
News
More Than 57,000 Patients Awaiting Appointments at VA Hospitals and Clinics, Audit Shows
More than 57,000 patients are still waiting for initial medical appointments at VA hospitals and clinics 90 days or more after requesting them, the Veterans Affairs Department said Monday.
The BlazeAug 20 2013
News
Can You Spot the Vital Gun Safety Rule Violated at Mayor Bloomberg?s Press Conference on Massive Seizure of Firearms?
New York Police Department officials and prosecutors announced details of the biggest firearm takedown in New York City history during a Monday press conference.
The BlazeJun 08 2020
Analysis
CBS Deceptively Edits Barr Interview, Leaving Out Key Details On Violent Riots, Police Oversight
Some of the most colorful descriptions of the violence facing police officers at Lafayette Square were clumsily spliced out of the middle of Barr's answers to questions.
Key details on violent riots near the White House were removed from the broadcast of an interview of Attorney General William Barr on CBS News’ “Face The Nation” Sunday. Anchor Margaret Brennan repeatedly described
The FederalistMay 15 2020
Analysis
COVID-19 Contact Tracers or Cootie Cops?
Tracing where people have been and who they’ve met can be effective for battling disease. But, oh boy, does it lend itself to abuse.
As if the viral-lockdown apocalypse wasn't already weird enough, now it looks like we'll be dealing with battalions of cootie cops checking on our comings and goings. Technically, they're "contact tracers" and their jobs involve speaking with people who
ReasonAug 17 2015
News
Hillary Clinton emails: Safe provided to lawyer among irregularities seen in review
When State Department officials first discovered that Hillary Rodham Clinton's personal email account contained classified information they did not seize the thumb drive containing her digitally archived inbox but rather provided her attorney a special safe to secure the device, according to interviews and documents.
Washington Times