The New Yorker Article Rating

Does Kamala Harris Need a Latino Campaign?

  • Bias Rating

    -78% Very Liberal

  • Reliability

    70% ReliableGood

  • Policy Leaning

    10% Center

  • Politician Portrayal

    11% Positive

Bias Score Analysis

The A.I. bias rating includes policy and politician portrayal leanings based on the author’s tone found in the article using machine learning. Bias scores are on a scale of -100% to 100% with higher negative scores being more liberal and higher positive scores being more conservative, and 0% being neutral.

Sentiments

Overall Sentiment

18% Positive

  •   Liberal
  •   Conservative
SentenceSentimentBias
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Bias Meter

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-100%
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Bias Meter

Contributing sentiments towards policy:

58% : After a courtroom appearance in Miami, last June, Trump visited the famous Cuban restaurant Versailles.
51% : Many leading Latino advocates began their political careers around the time of the immigrant-rights marches of 2006, when Democrats and moderate Republicans reached a consensus that fighting for immigration reform -- including a pathway to citizenship for millions of undocumented people -- was the best way to win Latino support.
50% : Abraham Enriquez, the founder of Bienvenido US, an advocacy group focussed on recruiting Latino youth to the Republican Party, told me that the campaign made a decision to not rely as much on Latino surrogates this year, because Trump is his own best surrogate.
44% : A survey conducted by Equis Research in June found that forty-one per cent of Latino voters trust Trump on immigration, compared with thirty-eight per cent who trust Biden.
37% : In November, Trump gave a nationally televised speech in Hialeah, Florida, which is heavily Latino, and he sat for an interview with Univision that prompted a backlash from liberal Latinos who said it was a sign of the network's capture by the right.
37% : After the 2016 election, when he worked for Hillary Clinton's Presidential campaign, he refuted the consensus view that Trump had won a greater share of the Latino vote than Mitt Romney won four years earlier.
15% : This year, polls showed that, at best, Biden was beating Trump among Latinos by a slightly narrower margin than last time and, at worst, that the two candidates were tied or even that Biden was running behind Trump.

*Our bias meter rating uses data science including sentiment analysis, machine learning and our proprietary algorithm for determining biases in news articles. Bias scores are on a scale of -100% to 100% with higher negative scores being more liberal and higher positive scores being more conservative, and 0% being neutral. The rating is an independent analysis and is not affiliated nor sponsored by the news source or any other organization.

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