AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
May 02 2019
News
Trump Administration Sues To Kill Obamacare
More than 20 million Americans are at risk of losing their health insurance.
Taking a harder line on health care, the Trump administration joined a coalition of Republican-led states Wednesday in asking a federal appeals court to entirely overturn former President Barack Obama’s signature health care law — a decision that could leave millions uninsured.
Congress rendered the
HuffPostSep 12 2019
Opinion
Wall Street is freaking out at the thought of President Liz Warren
The 2020 election is still a long way off, but the nation’s big banks are already pricing in the possibility of an Elizabeth Warren presidency, their senior executives tell me. The picture ain’t pretty — for the banks or average Americans.
True, Warren isn’t the Democrats’ frontrunner, and a lot could happen in coming months. Because it’s early, financial stocks haven’t officially
Guest Writer - RightMay 01 2019
News
Barr hearing: AG reveals tensions with Mueller team over Russia report conclusion, no-obstruction punt
Attorney General William Barr, in highly anticipated Senate testimony Wednesday, revealed tensions between the Justice Department and Robert Mueller’s team over the special counsel’s final report on the Russia investigation, pointedly saying he was surprised Mueller didn’t come to a conclusion over whether President Trump obstructed justice.
“We did not understand exactly why the
Fox News DigitalSep 08 2013
News
John Kerry: No Decision Yet On Seeking UN Vote Over Syria Strike
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday the United States did not rule out the possibility of returning to the United Nations Security Council to secure a resolution on Syria once U.N. inspectors complete their report.
Speaking at a news conference in Paris with his Qatari counterpart Khaled al-Attiya, Kerry said President Barack Obama had yet to make a decision on the issue
HuffPostMar 16 2018
News
Shep Smith Has the Hardest Job on Fox News
In a Manhattan Fox News studio on a recent Tuesday in February, Shepard Smith sits ready to begin taping his 3 p.m. newscast. He’s spent the preceding hour typing out edits to his script with slightly hunched posture, raising his eyebrows at his keyboard and reading his monologue to himself to test its accuracy and its cadence. The computers behind him—clad in giant white shells, they look
Time MagazineJun 01 2015
News
56 Percent of Voters Favor Right to Same-Sex Marriage: Poll
By a margin of 56 percent to 38 percent, American voters favor a constitutional right to same-sex marriage, according to a new Quinnipiac University National Poll.
The results come as the country awaits the Supreme Court’s decision on the controversial issue, which is expected sometime this month. The Court’s ruling will address "the power of the states to ban same-sex marriages and to
Newsmax (News)Oct 06 2014
News
Vice President Joe Biden apologizes to Turkey, UAE
U.S. Vice President Joe Biden has apologized to the United Arab Emirates and Turkey for comments he made last week that Middle Eastern allies are partly to blame for the strengthening of ISIS. The latest apology came in phone call from Biden to the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, representatives from both countries said Sunday. The vice president issued an apology to
CNN DigitalJul 11 2019
News
Democrat Buttigieg unveils plan to fight racism in America
Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana - whose campaign has been dogged by accusations of systemic racism in his city as he struggles to gain support from African-American voters - on Thursday announced a plan to battle racial inequality in America.
Buttigieg, who is white and has seen issues of race flare up in South Bend after the fatal
ReutersMay 28 2015
News
Cool Mitch McConnell gets passionate — and pays
Mitch McConnell rarely goes out on a limb on issues that divide Senate Republicans. He’s more prone to sit back and listen, let his conference work out their differences — and only then assert his own views. But the majority leader ditched that dispassionate approach when it came time to renew the country’s anti-terrorism surveillance laws — he spoke out early and vociferously against
PoliticoMar 26 2024
Headline Roundup
Supreme Court Appears Likely to Preserve Access to Abortion Pill
The Supreme Court justices appeared skeptical of arguments against the abortion pill mifepristone while hearing arguments on Tuesday, signaling that they likely will not roll back access to the drug.
For Context: This is the first major abortion case heard by the justices since the court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 and deemed abortion access to not be a constitutional right. Last
Associated Press Wall Street Journal (News) Fox News Digital