AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Jul 23 2013
Opinion
PRUDEN: Waiting for the repo man in Detroit
Someone knocked on the door at city hall in Detroit last week and there stood the repo man coming to take possession of the city.
Washington TimesDec 24 2019
News
Battle Over McGahn Testimony Heightens Trump Impeachment Drama
THE ONGOING BATTLE TO compel former White House counsel Don McGahn's testimony has opened a new front on the war over President Donald Trump's impeachment as the articles appear stalled in making their way to the Senate until at least early January.
U.S. News & World ReportOct 24 2023
Headline Roundup
Hostage Released by Hamas Describes Capture, Tunnel System
One of the two hostages released by Hamas on Monday described her capture to reporters.
The Details: Hamas released two women, Nurit Cooper, 79, and Yocheved Lifshitz, 85, on Monday, citing "humanitarian and poor health grounds." Roughly 200 more hostages remain held inside Gaza.
Key Quotes: Lifshitz said terrorists "stormed into our homes. They beat people. They kidnapped others
Fox News Digital Reuters CNN DigitalDec 02 2019
News
Putin Approves Law Labeling Journalists 'Foreign Agents' In Russia
The Russian government now has the right to classify individual journalists, bloggers and even social media users as "foreign agents" with a new law signed by President Vladmir Putin on Monday.
A Russian law pertaining to media outlets receiving foreign funding was approved in 2017, in response to the U.S. Justice Department compelling the Russia-funded channel RT America to register as
NPR (Online News)Feb 08 2020
News
Fact-checking the eighth Democratic primary debate
The eighth Democratic presidential debate of the 2020 campaign, hosted by ABC, WMUR (Channel 9), and Apple News, had seven candidates, lasted 2½ hours — and did not have many statements that merited fact-checking. Here are eight claims that caught our attention. Our practice is not to award Pinocchios in debate roundups.
“The reality is, on my watch, drug arrests in South Bend were
Washington PostOct 28 2020
Analysis
Fear Of Voter Intimidation Is Its Own Voter Intimidation
In 1981, the Republican National Committee sent hundreds of armed, off-duty police officers to the polls in the state of New Jersey. Dressed in official-looking “National Ballot Security Task Force” armbands, they demanded voter registration cards from people waiting in line in heavily Black and Hispanic districts, turning some voters away and intimidating others into not voting at all.
538 (ABC News)Jul 08 2020
News
USMCA and Trade Policy
“A modernized U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade pact took effect [last] Wednesday… The [USMCA] includes tighter North American content rules for autos, new protections for intellectual property, prohibitions against currency manipulation and new rules on digital commerce that did not exist when NAFTA launched in 1994.” (Reuters)
“A push by Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) for a historic Senate vote on
The Flip SideDec 13 2019
News
Trump's Executive Order on Combating Anti-Semitism
This Abridge News topic aggregates four unique arguments on different sides of the debate. Here are the quick facts to get you started:
THE QUICK FACTS
President Trump signed an executive order Wednesday afternoon which specifies that Jews on college campuses are protected under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 when cases of discrimination are "based on Abridge NewsJun 23 2020
News
Undocumented workers an 'invisible public health risk'
There are an estimated one million undocumented workers in the UK. The coronavirus pandemic has presented them with a new set of challenges and fears over how to maintain an income, remain healthy or even stay alive.
On an old square television in a shared house in a suburb of London, Filipina nanny Carla watches the government coronavirus daily briefings well aware the updates are not
BBC NewsNov 13 2020
Analysis
The Enraging Deja Vu of a Third Coronavirus Wave
There’s a joke I’ve seen circulating online, over and over during this pandemic, that goes along the lines of, “Months this year: January, February, March, March, March, March, March…”
My lips pull into a smile, but my heart’s not in it.
I was on the phone two weeks ago with a nurse who lives in Missouri, where cases have risen from 1,100 per day in August to about 3,400 daily in
ProPublica