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Overall, we rate Real Clear Politics as right-center biased based on source selection that leans right. We also rate them as Mostly Factual in reporting rather than High due to some sources that have failed fact checks.
Sen. Marco Rubio weighed in on MSNBC's Rachel Maddow censoring former President Donald Trump's victory speech in Iowa and the media's hatred. Real Clear Politics' coverage of this incident was criticized by some for being one-sided and unfairly targeting Trump.
Real Clear Politics has been catering to campaign obsessives since 2000. It pitches itself as a “trusted, go-to source” for unbiased polling. The Trump era changed its tone, and funding...
A new New York Times/Siena College poll released Saturday has former President Donald Trump leading President Joe Biden 48% to 43%, indicating a shift in public opinion. How does Real Clear Politics compare in terms of accuracy when stacked against polls like this?
During an AllSides Editorial Review of RealClearPolitics conducted Sept. 25, 2020, there was a general consensus that Center is still the best rating for RealClearPolitics due to the balance displayed on the site's homepage of curated content.
A new AllSides analysis found RealClearPolitics to be largely balanced, confirming our Center AllSides Media Bias Rating™ for the news aggregator. AllSides found 32% of articles displayed on RealClearPolitics’ homepage over a two-week period in Jan. 2023 were from media outlets on the left and 35% were from sources on the right.
RealClearPolitics fact-checking section has a Center bias, according to a July 2021 independent review by AllSides staff. RealClearPolitics displays fact-checking on the page called Fact Ch.
538’s pollster ratings are calculated by analyzing the historical accuracy and methodological transparency of each polling organization’s polls. We define accuracy as the average adjusted error...
In November 2020, The New York Times published an article alleging that since 2017, when many of its "straight-news" reporting journalists were laid off, RealClearPolitics showed a pro-Trump turn with donations to its affiliated nonprofit increasing from entities supported by wealthy conservatives. [11]
Real Clear Politics (RCP) rating on election day. 46.8% (+3.2% victory) 43.6%. 9.6%. In the 2016 election, Five Thirty Eight VASTLY over estimated the amount of 3rd party/nonvotes and VASTLY underrated Trump's support. RealClearPolitics also overestimated the (other) column, but overall was far more accurate.