AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Aug 10 2022
News
Fed Will Have to Crush Job Market to Bring Inflation Down to Around 2 Percent: Goldman Economist
A prominent economist for Goldman Sachs has argued in a new interview that the Federal Reserve will have to rein in the lively job market in order to curtail inflation, responding to Friday’s release of payroll reports showing the lowest level of unemployment in over five decades, even as the economy appears to enter an unofficial state of recession.
Jan Hatzius, who serves as chief
The Epoch TimesMay 21 2021
News
New York COVID restrictions lifted, Cuomo calls changes a ‘milestone’
The city that never sleeps is ready for a great awakening.
After enduring more than 13 months of a global pandemic that ravaged the Big Apple, New York is taking a major step toward a return to normal with mask mandates and restrictions on businesses being lifted.
Gov. Cuomo offered a celebratory pat on the back Wednesday, marking the “milestone” as a majority of the state’s
New York Daily NewsSep 04 2013
News
Obama faces Syria test as House holds 1st hearing
The Obama administration is facing a tougher examination of its plans for military intervention in Syria, squaring off against tea party Republicans and other skeptical House members a day after gaining Speaker John Boehner's endorsement and significant support in the Senate.
TownhallSep 03 2013
News
Hagel, Kerry Appearing Before Congress
Congress is holding its first public hearing about U.S. plans for military intervention in Syria as President Barack Obama seeks to convince skeptical Americans and their lawmakers about the need to respond to last month's alleged sarin gas attack outside Damascus.
HuffPostSep 02 2013
News
Congress 'Evenly Divided' On Next Moves In Syria
President Barack Obama and his top aides launched a full-scale political offensive on Sunday to persuade a skeptical Congress to approve a military strike against Syria but faced an uphill struggle to win over many lawmakers and a war-weary American public.
HuffPostFeb 14 2022
News
Republicans call on Biden to end COVID's public health emergency designation
Republicans in Congress have asked President Biden to end the designation of COVID-19 as a public health emergency (PHE), citing the accessibility of vaccines and effective treatments as well as the harms of long-term isolation on public health.
Their request for the president to undo the designation comes as calls grow — including from former Biden advisers — for the federal government
NPR (Online News)Aug 24 2021
News
Anthony Fauci apologizes for latest gaffe in COVID analysis
Dr. Anthony Fauci has admitted making his latest mistake in coronavirus guidance, this time over when he thinks the pandemic will come “under control” — apologizing by saying, “My bad.”
The White House coronavirus czar had told NPR on Monday that if enough people get vaccinated, the US could “really get some good control over this” by the fall or winter of next year.
But quizzed
New York Post (News)Jul 20 2021
News
Fauci: Paul doesn't know what he's talking about 'and I want to say that officially'
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) on Tuesday escalated his ongoing feud with the nation's top infectious diseases doctor Anthony Fauci about the role the National Institutes of Health (NIH) played in funding controversial research in Wuhan, China.
The two traded barbs during a tense exchange, triggering a shouting match in which Fauci accused Paul of lying in order to further his agenda.
The HillMar 30 2021
News
'We're skating on a knife's edge right now': Scientists worry US could be headed for yet another COVID-19 surge
As COVID-19 cases creep up again across the country, federal officials and epidemiologists say they're worried we could hit another tipping point, leading to a fourth significant surge of infections, hospitalizations and deaths.
"We're skating on a knife's edge right now," said Nicholas Reich, a biostatistician at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Average daily reported
USA TODAYMar 28 2013
News
Justices Cast Doubt On Federal Defense Of Marriage Act
In oral arguments several Supreme Court justices expressed strong skepticism about DOMA the law that bars same-sex couples legally married under state law from receiving the same federal benefits as married heterosexual couples.
NPR (Online News)