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May 2026 editorial profile for Jerusalem Post. Below: how this outlet framed the actors and regions it covered most in May 2026. Tap any tile to jump to the detailed card.
One tile per entity (country or public figure) covered enough times this month to draw a confident editorial-stance read. Colour from red (hostile) to green (supportive); intensity scales with headline volume. Tap to jump to the detailed card.
The outlet reports Netanyahu's statements and actions neutrally (e.g., head. 2, 12, 22) but also includes headlines that highlight his legal difficulties (head. 4, 5, 8), political setbacks (head. 14, 18), and criticism from others (head. 1, 6, 10, 23). The overall stance is neutral because the outlet does not consistently frame Netanyahu positively or negatively in its own voice; the negative signals come from reported facts and quotes, not from the outlet's evaluative language.
The entity is LB (Lebanon), but coverage focuses almost exclusively on Hezbollah as a non-state actor within Lebanon, not the Lebanese state itself. The outlet's stance toward Lebanon as a country is indirectly negative due to Hezbollah's presence, but the direct target of hostility is Hezbollah, not the Lebanese government or people. Stance is -2 toward Hezbollah, but toward Lebanon as a country it would be more nuanced (0 or -1).
The outlet's own vocabulary consistently frames Hamas negatively (e.g., 'terror group', 'terrorists', 'smuggle funds', 'war crimes'), and coverage focuses on Israeli military actions against Hamas, arrests, and internal strife. No headlines present Hamas sympathetically or quote its leaders authoritatively. The entity is treated as a security threat and adversary.
The outlet's own vocabulary ('terrorist activities', 'murder-for-hire', 'regime change') consistently frames Iran negatively; even neutral-sounding headlines about negotiations are juxtaposed with hostile framing. The entity is Iran as a country, not a single leader, and the coverage treats the entire state as a pariah.
The outlet treats the US (especially the Trump administration) as a credible actor in the Iran conflict, amplifying its statements and threats without distancing language. However, some headlines (e.g., 18, 19) report friction with Israel and internal US dissent (6, 14, 21, 23) neutrally, slightly tempering the positive stance. The entity is the US as a country, not just the administration, so coverage of protests and judicial actions is included but does not shift the overall stance significantly.
Headlines 10 and 15 include internal criticism, but the outlet does not adopt a critical stance toward Israel itself; rather, it reports these as news. The overall framing consistently treats Israel as a legitimate actor and emphasizes its strengths and successes.
Coverage is largely neutral in the outlet's own voice, but several headlines embed criticism from third parties (e.g., CNN, Gulf states) or report negative developments (e.g., $1 billion ballroom, veto of Kurdish aid). Headline 2 is positive toward Trump (endorsed candidate wins), but this is balanced by negative framing elsewhere. No strong editorial stance toward Trump emerges.
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