AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Sep 28 2022
News
John Fetterman wipes Black Lives Matter section from campaign site amid attacks over crime
Senate candidate John Fetterman, D-Pa., has removed mentions of Black Lives Matter from his campaign website in the last month, a review of archived webpages showed.
The "issues" page on Fetterman's website currently includes sections on inflation ,criminal justice reform, legalizing cannabis, renewable energy, immigration and several other topics, but doesn't include any section
Fox News DigitalNov 04 2022
News
‘It’s a mess’: Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly on border crisis
While many Americans are focused on inflation, crime and abortion as we approach the midterm elections, people living in border states also rank border security as a top priority when it comes time to cast their ballot.
The Border Patrol sectors along Arizona`s southern border experienced record-breaking migrant encounters in the last fiscal year, and each candidate has an idea on how
NewsNationNov 04 2022
News
GOP Rep. Dan Crenshaw: Election Deniers Admit It's A Lie Behind Closed Doors
Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) revealed what election deniers actually say behind closed doors as a slew of reality-defying candidates run as Republicans in next week’s 2022 midterms.
“It was always a lie. The whole thing was always a lie. And it was a lie meant to rile people up,” the Texas Republican said of the lie that Donald Trump was cheated by widespread voter fraud in the 2020
HuffPostJul 19 2021
Opinion
The Un-canceled
You’ve heard about cancel culture, but reformations sow the seeds of counter-reformations. Today there is a growing movement to un-cancel celebrated men.
In an ad hoc movement, there is no consistently applied standard, but some of the men who lost high-profile jobs and suffered various other kinds of censure are slowly moving back into public life. Cancellation is not necessarily
Kyle SmithMay 08 2023
Perspectives Blog
Beyond 1:1 Dialogue: How We Can Depolarize at Scale and Climb Mount Polarization
This blog was written by Aaron Kohrs of the Braver Angels Washignton D.C. Alliance. He has a Center rating.
Everyone knows we need to change—we need to depolarize our politics at a national scale. The entire political discourse of our nation needs to shift: to be less corrosive, more productive, and more reflective of our country’s many diverse, nuanced viewpoints. The question then
Aaron KohrsOct 03 2022
Perspectives Blog
What the 2022 Candidates are Saying About Immigration
Immigration and border security are key issues in every election, and the upcoming 2022 midterm elections are no exception. With the elections approaching, this contentious political issue is once again brought to the forefront as a topic for every candidate to tackle.
Across the political spectrum, candidates see immigration and border security as an area in which reform is necessary
Rose MercerSep 29 2022
News
Biden Admin Spends Tens Of Millions To Deliver Fiber Internet To Only About 90 Rural Alaska Households
President Joe Biden’s Department of Agriculture (USDA) is spending tens of millions in tax dollars to bring fiber optic internet to rural southeast Alaska.
As part of USDA’s “Reconnect Program,” it awarded a roughly $33 million grant to the Alaska Telephone Company (ATC), the agency announced last Thursday. Fiber will be delivered to 92 households and a total of 211 people and five
The Daily CallerJun 27 2022
News
State budget deal: Most Californians will get stimulus payments
Governor Gavin Newsom announced with state legislative leaders that they have agreed on a budget that will provide stimulus payments to most Californians.
Most Californians would receive stimulus payments ranging from $200 to $350 per person under a budget deal that Gov. Gavin Newsom and state legislative leaders announced Sunday night.
Tax refunds under the agreement’s $17
San Francisco ChronicleJan 10 2023
News
House GOP’s slim majority passes new rules aimed at accountability, reining in federal spending
The slim House Republican majority scored its first big win Monday by passing a set of rules that make significant changes to the way the chamber operates and let lawmakers take aim at reckless government spending.
Rules pushed by the most fiscally conservative House lawmakers will make it easier to pass bills that reduce federal spending and more difficult to raise the nation’s
Washington TimesJan 15 2015
News
How public funding of elections makes politics even more polarized
Public funding of elections — that is, relying on tax revenue more than private donations to fund candidate campaigns — is a popular campaign finance reform proposal, if one that many Americans don’t fully embrace. Public funding is often thought to free candidates from the burden of fundraising and reduce the influence of wealthy donors and special interests. That all sounds good. Who
Washington Post