- BBC News
- The Guardian
- Bloomberg
- Al Jazeera America
- Associated Press
- Reuters
- The Economist
- NPR
- Wall Street Journal
- ABC News
- CNBC
- The Atlantic
I'd to forcefully turn of New York Times, Washington Post, Poltico, Fox News, CNN etc to reduce noise.If you read CNN, you know it is biased to the democrats. If you read Fox News, you know it is biased to the republicans.
Learn where your other sources lean too. Read opposing views as well as your own. Don't simply dismiss an idea or viewpoint because you disagree with it.
You take a little quiz that asks you questions relating to political issues. It then compares your answers to the candidates.
https://www.politicalcompass.org/
Amusingly political compass says I completely disagree with both Trump and Clinton - they're both in the Authoritarian-Right quadrant, whereas I end up in the Libertarian-Left quadrant. Whereas isidewith says I agree 98% with Clinton and also with Jill Stein, on environmental + criminal + electoral + social issues.
So I'm not sure what we conclude from that. If both sites are accurate then my best choice on the menu is Clinton, but the menu is terrible and doesn't have any options remotely like what I actually want.
So for this election, you're closest to Clinton, but your ideal situation looks completely different from anything that could realistically result from this election.
They are by far the best source for informing yourself on state and local races.
There's a lot of other great sources mentioned already, but wanted to add my fave to the list.
A heavily subjective answer to your question: there would be no difference between the two presidencies. Don't waste your time with gathering information on the mascots. Just lean back and enjoy the show.
I'm only half joking here, too, which is the saddest part. Every article ends up being eviscerated by the comments section because of some bias in one direction or the other, so I might as well just cut to the chase and watch the actual discussions unfold.
Also, forum.nationstates.net. For the uninitiated, it's the forum for an online political simulator; unsurprisingly, it attracts people who actually study politics or are otherwise psychologically invested in the political world, so it's interesting to see the perspectives of people who may or may not actually be experts in political science. Sometimes they seem to just enjoy politics for politics' sake, though, which gets fascinating in the same way that a train wreck is fascinating.
If you want a shortcut, the only one that works is to find someone whose knowledge and judgment you can trust. That could be a celebrity commentator, or it could be your father. Plumb the depths of their knowledge by asking questions, and challenging the answers, and (here's the hard part) if they prove themselves worthy, make the decision to trust their recommendation even if your emotions tell you to vote the other way.
I tend to try to find the candidates platforms posted on their official websites. I look at each of their points and try to see how that agrees with my own stance.