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April 2026 editorial profile for Financial Times. Below: how this outlet framed the actors and regions it covered most in April 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 bundle focuses heavily on Trump and US policy, often with critical or skeptical framing (e.g., 'Trump truce keeps Gulf’s Iran menace alive', 'Tariffs are Trump’s perpetual leverage machine', 'S&P 500’s woes in Trump 2.0'), but the stance is toward the US as a country, not solely Trump. Coverage of US entities (companies, government) is largely neutral or factual, with some critical distance on Trump's impact. The entity 'US' is broad, and the outlet does not consistently celebrate or delegitimize the US overall.
Headline 20 is neutral-positive (market boost), but the overwhelming majority frame Trump negatively or critically. The outlet does not use celebratory or promotional language; it distances itself via critical framing and quoting critics.
Headlines treat GB as a location or market, not as a political entity with a stance. No consistent positive or negative framing of the country itself.
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