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May 2026 editorial profile for Sky News. 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.
Coverage is heavily focused on Trump as US representative, with some headlines neutral (e.g., #2, #15) and others critical of US policy or actions (e.g., #16, #19). The outlet does not consistently praise or condemn the US as a whole; stance is mixed and entity is broad.
The outlet does not use overtly hostile language toward Starmer, but the overwhelming selection of headlines about his weak position, internal challenges, and potential replacement creates a skeptical, crisis-oriented frame. Headlines quoting Starmer directly (e.g., #1, #16) are neutral or slightly positive, but they are outnumbered by negative framing. The entity's own quoted content is not attacked, but the outlet's editorial choice foregrounds his political vulnerability.
Coverage is largely factual and neutral, but some headlines use mildly critical verbs ('lashes out', 'jokes') and include negative reactions from others, suggesting slight skepticism rather than hostility or promotion. The entity's quoted content is often assertive or controversial, but the outlet does not adopt a consistently positive or negative stance.
The entity is a country (GB), not a single actor; coverage spans a wide range of topics from royal diplomacy to political crises, with no overarching positive or negative stance toward the nation itself. The outlet reports critically on government figures and institutions, but this is standard political journalism, not a stance against the country.
Coverage is almost entirely about US-China summit dynamics and Trump's statements; the outlet does not express its own stance toward CN. Headline 3 mentions Trump's lack of optimism about Jimmy Lai, but this is Trump's view, not Sky News'. Headline 11 is unrelated to CN. Overall, the outlet's voice is neutral.
The outlet does not use distancing verbs or negative framing toward Xi; it reports Trump's praise and Xi's statements neutrally. However, the competitive framing in some headlines (e.g., 'who came out on top?') could imply a zero-sum lens, but this is about the summit outcome, not a stance toward Xi. The bundle is primarily factual and event-driven, with no clear positive or negative editorial stance toward Xi.
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