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February 2026 editorial profile for Handelsblatt. Below: how this outlet framed the actors and regions it covered most in February 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.
Coverage is predominantly factual or mixed; negative framing appears in scandal-related headlines (Epstein, Trump justice) and in questioning US trustworthiness, but many headlines are neutral business or political reporting. No consistent positive or negative stance toward the US as a whole.
The entity 'DE' (Germany) is not the primary actor in most headlines; coverage focuses on companies, politics, and international events. No consistent positive or negative framing of Germany itself is detectable.
Several headlines are neutral or factual (e.g., 2, 3, 12, 17, 18), and some report Trump's statements without overt editorializing (e.g., 5, 7, 8). However, the bundle includes clear critical framing (headline 1: 'autokratische Reflexe'; headline 10: 'Trump-Freunde kontrollieren bald CNN – Ein Leuchtturm des US-Journalismus erlischt'; headline 20: 'verärgert Trump') and a pattern of highlighting tensions and negative consequences (e.g., 15, 16, 19, 21, 22). The overall stance is skeptical/critical but not consistently hostile across all items.
Headline 10 publishes Merz's speech verbatim (positive treatment), but headline 12 advises him to change rhetoric and headline 24 calls his chance 'vertan' (wasted), showing editorial criticism. Overall, the outlet treats Merz as a normal political actor with both amplification and critique, not consistently favourable or hostile.
Epstein is deceased and cannot be quoted; the outlet's stance is uniformly hostile, framing him as the center of a criminal scandal that undermines trust in institutions.
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