AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Aug 29 2013
News
In Congress, a Bid to Undo Dialysis Cuts
Many members of Congress who voted to eliminate over 500 million a year in federal government waste now want to reverse that move, demonstrating lobbyists' muscle.
New York Times (News)Aug 04 2020
News
Biden as Bernie Bro: Trump campaign to recast Democrat as tool of the Left
Joe Biden may have won the Democratic presidential nomination, but the Bernie Sanders wing of the party will prevail in the White House. That’s the message President Trump’s reelection campaign is honing in on in the homestretch.
It is the theme of two ads the Trump campaign launched in early-voting states on Monday. The first ad “exposes Joe Biden as a tool of the radical left for his
Washington ExaminerNov 08 2013
Opinion
PRUDEN: What do Virginia's losses say about next year and 2016?
Earl Long, the late and great governor of Louisiana, once boasted that he knew how to fix an election and a voting machine was no more difficult to master than a paper ballot.
Washington TimesOct 09 2019
News
White House 'will not co-operate with impeachment inquiry'
The White House has officially refused to co-operate with the impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump.
A letter sent to Democratic leaders rejected it as "baseless" and "constitutionally invalid".
Three Democratic-led House committees are investigating Mr Trump.
The inquiry is trying to find out if the president held back aid to Ukraine to push it to investigate
BBC NewsMar 04 2020
Perspectives Blog
The 2020 Elections
Updated May 2 at 5:25 p.m. ET
Note: In addition to live election updates below, AllSides provides balanced news and information on the top candidates: former Vice President Joe Biden (D) and current President Donald Trump (R).
For all the latest balanced news on elections, visit our Elections topic page.
View the most recent polls and newest polling data as aggregated by
Henry A. BrechterApr 11 2020
Background
Supreme Court of the United States
The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) is the highest court in the federal judiciary of the United States of America. It has ultimate (and largely discretionary) appellate jurisdiction over all federal and state court cases that involve a point of federal law, and original jurisdiction over a narrow range of cases, specifically "all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers
WikipediaJun 27 2019
Headline Roundup
The Most Googled Candidate From Last Night: Tulsi Gabbard
After the first Democratic debate held on Wednesday, Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (D - HI) was the most-searched candidate on Google.
Google Analytics released an infographic showing which candidates were the most searched in each state. Gabbard went from relatively unsearched to a trending search in most states.
It is still unclear whether she 'won' the debate, however, it is
The Blaze Vox The HillNov 04 2014
News
Election 2014: The big day is here
Now, at last, America gets to decide. Millions of people are casting votes nationwide in an election that could hand Republicans the Senate after a nasty, negative campaign that cost nearly $4 billion. Voters are encountering some hiccups as they head to the polls. In Georgia, home to a competitive Senate and governor's race, a state website that provides poll location information was down.
CNN DigitalAug 24 2016
News
The GOP Is Writing Off 30 Percent of the American Electorate
According to some polls, Donald Trump has been pulling as little as 0 percent of the black vote in key battleground states such as Ohio and Pennsylvania. Zero percent! That's mind-boggling and sure, it might pick up after his recent speeches identifying with the plight of African Americans living in urban areas that have been under Democratic control for decades.
ReasonApr 16 2016
News
The Real Ted Cruz Conspiracy: Convincing Voters to Hate Him Less
Ted Cruz is a realistic man. He knows he won’t surpass Donald Trump in votes or delegates by the time he gets to the Republican National Convention, in Cleveland, and he knows no one can stand him personally, apart from several lovers who seem to exist mainly in the pipe dreams of the National Enquirer.
Vanity Fair