AllSides Balanced Search reveals information and ideas from all sides of the political spectrum so you can get the full picture.
Sep 24 2020
News
Two Louisville police officers were shot during a night of protests.
Two Louisville police officers were shot during demonstrations on Wednesday night, the police chief said, after a grand jury decided to not charge any officer in the killing of Breonna Taylor, instead indicting one former detective for recklessly firing into another apartment during a botched raid on Ms. Taylor’s apartment in March.
A suspect, Larynzo Johnson, 26, was arrested Wednesday
New York Times (News)Jan 28 2013
News
Senate group reaches immigration deal
A powerful group of senators from both parties has reached a deal on the outlines of a comprehensive immigration overhaul, a development that will drive an emotional debate on a hot-button issue unseen in Washington for more than half a decade.
PoliticoSep 24 2020
News
The Biden Agenda: What Could Be Ahead for Higher Education
Expensive plans for free college and a return to Obama's Title IX guidance for starters.
When it comes to domestic policy, the question is which President Biden would emerge: the affable Obamaphile centrist or the AOC sock puppet? In higher education, it’s something of a difference without a distinction. Biden may have been the most centrist top-tier candidate in the 2020 Democratic
The DispatchJan 23 2015
News
Saudi King Abdullah Dead at Age of 90
Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah, the powerful U.S. ally who joined Washington’s fight against al-Qaida and sought to modernize the ultraconservative Muslim kingdom with incremental but significant reforms, including nudging open greater opportunities for women, has died, according to Saudi state TV. He was 90.
The BlazeJun 05 2024
Headline Roundup
What Does Claudia Sheinbaum's Victory Mean for Mexico and the United States?
How will Mexican president-elect Claudia Sheinbaum change the country and impact the United States?
From the Left: The Washington Post Editorial Board (Lean Left bias) determined the election “raises a legitimate concern about Mexico’s future: The party that won big on Sunday looks set to use its vast power to dismantle the institutions underpinning Mexican democracy, rebuilding the
Washington Post Newsweek Washington ExaminerNov 18 2021
Perspectives Blog
Story of the Week: Rittenhouse Trial Takes Precedence Over Major Infrastructure Bill
If judged by the amount of news coverage on it, the vast $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill signed into law Monday after months of partisan feuding is hardly a story this week compared to the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse. President Joe Biden signed the bill into law during a bipartisan ceremony Monday. It is the largest infrastructure investment in U.S. history and will likely have
AllSides StaffOct 28 2020
Opinion
The Trump Support You Don't See
Everyone can see President Donald Trump's rallies. In the final days of the campaign, he is jetting from swing state to swing state, drawing big crowds to outdoor airport events as he makes his closing argument for reelection.
But there are also pro-Trump events that aren't covered in the media. A case in point was a recent road rally, with thousands of Trump supporters jumping in their
TownhallFeb 10 2021
Perspectives Blog
Can Religion, Neuroscience, and Good Deeds Heal America?
Political polarization is a massive and complicated issue, one which can be explained, and combatted, through a number of different approaches. The One America Movement utilizes a unique approach to addressing polarization in the United States. It draws from psychology and social science, recruiting local religious leaders and grassroots organizers. It trains religious leaders and helps
Max KarlinOct 18 2019
News
38 people cited for violations in Clinton email probe
WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department has completed its internal investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s use of private email and found violations by 38 people, some of whom may face disciplinary action.
The investigation, launched more than three years ago, determined that those 38 people were “culpable” in 91 cases of sending classified information that ended
Associated PressMay 06 2022
Headline Roundup
Abbott Considers Challenging Right to Education for Children of Unauthorized Migrants
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott said Thursday that he might seek to overturn a 1982 Supreme Court decision establishing that children of unauthorized immigrants had a right to the same public education as U.S. citizens.
The decision, Plyler v. Doe, held that the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause included “anyone, citizen or stranger.” Abbott’s remarks came amid a surge of migrant
New York Times (News) The Texan Law & Crime