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Rank the Most Trusted News Sources in the US

30th Oct 2018
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In the era of social media, polarized politics, accusations of bias and "fake news", consumers of news in the US have to filter through the noise to get to the heart of current issues and events. Gone are the days of the likes of Walter Cronkite, when one could simply tune in to mainstream news and hear unbiased and factual commentary. Americans are increasingly looking beyond just the traditional outlets as their news source. But even in the midst of tweetstorms, racial epithets and political correctness, we all have some news sources that we trust more than others. Which would you rank as the best? Which do you judge to be the worst? Rank this list to let us know and comment below to share your opinion. If you think we have missed any of your favorite outlets, please add them as suggestions.

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Rank the Most Trusted News Sources in the US

#12.

Politico

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Politico was founded by John Harris, Jim VandeHei, and Robert Allbritton before the 2008 presidential election cycle to create a fast-paced magazine for Washington’s political insiders; designed to “win-the-morning” with its relentless scoops of various sizes. Harris and VandeHei swiftly courted extensive funding and a talented roster of reporters to deliver on their vision of creating the “ESPN of politics” and has since expanded its ambition to placing reporters in every U.S. state capital. In 2016, VandeHei and editorial leader Mike Allen left Politico to start Axios, a visually-compelling, short-form news site self-described as the product of ‘The Economist mated with Twitter.’ Politico, known earlier as The Politico, is an American political journalism company based in Arlington County, Virginia, that covers politics and policy in the United States and internationally. It distributes content through its website, television, physical newspapers, radio, and podcasts. Its coverage in Washington, D.C., includes the U.S. Congress, lobbying, media and the presidency. As of 2017, Politico averaged 26 million unique visitors a month to its American website, and more than 1.5 million unique visitors to its European site. The print newspaper has a circulation of approximately 32,000, distributed for free in Washington, D.C. and Manhattan. The newspaper prints up to five issues a week while Congress is in session and sometimes publishes one issue a week when Congress is in recess. It carries advertising, including full-page ads from trade associations and a large help-wanted section listing Washington political jobs. Politico is a partner with several news outlets that co-report and distribute its video, print and audio content. Partners include CBS News, Allbritton Communications's ABC station WJLA and cable channel NewsChannel 8, radio station WTOP-FM, and Yahoo! News election coverage. In a 2007 opinion piece, progressive watchdog group Media Matters for America accused Politico of having a "Republican tilt". In contrast, in 2011 politically conservative The Daily Caller declaimed Politico as having a pronounced liberal bias. Despite these accusations, a 2012 study found that the percentage of Politico readers that identify as Democrats – 29% – is the same as the percentage that identifies as Republicans. As of 2018, the largely crowd-sourced analysis engines AllSides rates Politico as "Left Lean" in terms of bias.
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