AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Feb 28 2016
News
Kasich: I'll Quit If I Don't Win Ohio
Republican presidential candidate John Kasich said Saturday that he will leave the race if he did not win the primary in his home state of Ohio next month.
Newsmax (News)Nov 13 2020
Analysis
What will the press do without Trump?
IN NOVEMBER 1962, the not-yet-infamous Richard Nixon famously gave what he claimed would be his last press conference, right after losing a gubernatorial race in California (and two years after losing a presidential bid to John Kennedy). This is what he told reporters:
“As I leave you, I want you to know—just think how much you’re going to be missing. You won’t have Nixon to kick
Columbia Journalism ReviewFeb 16 2020
News
21 States Reject $18 Billion Offer From Drug Wholesalers to Settle Opioid Litigation
An $18 billion offer from three major drug wholesalers aimed at settling litigation over their alleged role in the opioid crisis fell through, after more than 20 state attorneys general rejected it in a letter to the companies’ law firms this week.
The letter, reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, shows that the drug industry hasn’t won enough support from states to begin moving the
Wall Street Journal (News)Mar 19 2015
Opinion
'Trusted' Media Hero Jon Stewart's Worst Rants at Conservatives | Media Research Center
Jon Stewarts announcement that he will be leaving The Daily Show not surprisingly led to wistful fawning from liberal reporters.
Apr 28 2021
News
Democrats’ Thin House Majority to Be Tested by Multitrillion-Dollar Plans
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) is now leading the slimmest House majority since World War I, putting a premium on party unity as leaders this spring craft trillions of dollars of infrastructure and antipoverty legislation.
A handful of Democratic lawmakers have said they would try to block any tax changes proposed by President Biden that don’t also restore state and local tax
Jan 15 2020
News
Surgeon General Rejects Supervised Injection Sites: ‘Safer Doesn’t Mean Safe’
Surgeon General Jerome Adams on Wednesday rejected the provision of supervised injection sites, facilities where people can inject themselves with illegal drugs under medical supervision, as a response to the opioid crisis, citing safety concerns.
“I’m not bashing any particular person or group,” Adams said at the libertarian Cato Institute in Washington, D.C., “But the truth is, I have
National Review (News)Feb 19 2019
News
‘He just picks up’: Trump and the lawmakers he loves to talk to on the phone
One surprise call came from Air Force One as President Trump was leaving Iraq, startling Sen. James M. Inhofe (R) as he was chopping wood back home in rural Oklahoma with his grandson. When Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) recently stepped off a plane, a White House voice mail was waiting for him, saying Trump was “available for the rest of the evening” for another round of their regular phone
Washington PostMay 04 2021
News
Democrats confront difficult prospects for midterms
House Democrats are beginning to confront the challenging reality awaiting them in the 2022 midterm elections amid a spate of retirements and dim redistricting prospects.
Democrats had hoped that brightening economic and public health outlooks combined with ongoing discord within the GOP would save them from the kind of electoral thrashing that historically besets the president’s party
The HillAug 28 2020
News
Abe to resign over health, ending era of political stability
OSAKA/TOKYO – Ending weeks of speculation, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe announced Friday that he is stepping down for health reasons a second time, leaving Tokyo scrambling to make the transition to the post-Abe era.
Attention has now shifted to who will replace Abe and when. The nation’s political nerve center had recently been abuzz about whether Abe would resign over his chronic
The Japan Times