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Mai 2026: Redaktionsprofil fuer Reuters. Unten: wie diese Quelle die meistbehandelten Akteure und Regionen im Mai 2026 einordnet hat. Tippen Sie auf eine Kachel, um zur Detailkarte zu springen.
Eine Kachel pro Entitaet (Land oder Person), die in diesem Monat oft genug behandelt wurde, um eine belastbare Haltungs-Analyse zu erlauben. Farbe von rot (feindselig) bis gruen (unterstuetzend); Intensitaet folgt dem Berichterstattungsvolumen. Tippen springt zur Detailkarte.
The bundle is largely factual and balanced, with no consistent positive or negative editorial voice toward Russia. Headline 3 includes a critical third-party quote, but the outlet does not endorse it. Headline 2 quotes Putin neutrally. Headline 12 presents accusations from both sides. The entity is Russia as a country, not a single leader, which makes stance assessment more diffuse.
Headline 11 reports an arrest of a former aide, which could imply negative association, but it is framed as a graft probe widening, not directly critical of Zelenskiy. Headline 15 mentions a potential stripping of a Polish honor, but it is attributed to Poland's president, not Reuters' own stance. Overall, Reuters treats Zelenskiy as a credible and authoritative figure, though not celebratory.
Coverage is overwhelmingly about Japanese companies and economic data, not about Japan as a political entity. The few political mentions (headlines 1, 23) are reported neutrally via third-party sources. No consistent positive or negative framing of Japan itself is detectable.
Coverage is overwhelmingly factual and event-driven, with Xi's role as a diplomatic counterpart to Trump and Putin. Headlines 3 and 16 use mildly positive framing ('unite', 'old friend'), but the outlet does not adopt a promotional or hostile stance. The entity's quoted content (e.g., criticising US, warning on Taiwan) is reported without the outlet endorsing or distancing itself. Stance is neutral overall.
The entity is a country, not a single actor; coverage is fragmented across politics, business, and legal stories. Stance is neutral because Reuters reports events without editorializing about the UK as a whole. Political headlines about Starmer are critical in content (e.g., leadership challenge, election drubbing) but Reuters uses neutral verbs and attribution, not hostile framing toward the UK itself.
Coverage is predominantly factual and neutral, but some headlines include critical framing from external sources (e.g., EU ministers dismissing Putin's idea, Estonia's spy chief on difficult choices). No consistent positive or negative editorial stance toward Putin; the outlet reports his actions and statements without overt endorsement or hostility.
Headline 14 (stripped of Polish honour) and 19 (ex-top aide arrested) introduce mild negative signals, but they are isolated and do not reflect the outlet's own evaluative stance toward Zelenskiy. The outlet consistently treats Zelenskiy as a credible source and legitimate actor, even when his quoted content is critical of others.
Coverage is predominantly neutral and descriptive, with no consistent positive or negative framing of the US as an entity. Headlines report US actions, statements, and policies without editorializing. The entity is treated as a standard news subject, not lionized or delegitimized. Some headlines (e.g., 22) include US industry pleading with Trump, but this reflects internal US dynamics rather than Reuters' stance.
Coverage is primarily about Samsung Electronics as a company, not the country KR. Headlines mix positive market milestones (e.g., $1 trillion club) with neutral labor dispute reporting, without editorializing stance toward South Korea as a country.
Headline 9 shows a critical pattern (promise vs. outcome), but most headlines are straight news. Headlines 10, 23, 24 quote Trump directly without distancing. Overall stance is neutral; no consistent hostility or promotion.
Coverage is mixed and largely factual; no consistent positive or negative framing of CN as a country. Headlines about Xi are neutral or report his actions without editorializing. The entity is a country, not a single actor, so stance is inherently diffuse.
Coverage is predominantly neutral, reporting Rubio's statements and actions factually. However, headlines 5 and 6 introduce critical angles (Democrats demanding explanation, Vatican tensions implying deep Trump tensions) that slightly tilt the overall stance toward neutral rather than positive. The entity's own statements are reported without distancing verbs, but the outlet does not consistently amplify or celebrate Rubio.
Coverage is largely factual and balanced, with no consistent positive or negative editorial stance toward India as a country. Some headlines highlight challenges (toxic workplace, market threats, austerity impact) but these are reported neutrally. The entity is a country, not a person, so stance is assessed on overall treatment; no clear bias detected.
The entity is NONE (country), so stance is not applicable; all headlines are neutral reporting of events and statements without favoring or disfavoring any country.
Coverage is diverse across French companies, politicians, and policy; no consistent positive or negative framing of France as a whole. Headline 15 quotes Le Pen's stance on NATO but Reuters does not endorse or criticize it. Stance is neutral because the outlet treats France as a subject of factual reporting, not as an entity to be praised or condemned.
Spitzenstunde: 11:00 UTC