The top 10 neighbors for CBS News Politics compress into a narrow band — scores running from 0.93 down to 0.91 — with no single entity pulling sharply ahead of the rest. That flat distribution is the defining structural fact here.
The mix across those ten positions spans three subcategories. News Publishers account for four slots: NBC Politics at 0.93, HuffPost Politics at 0.93, CNN Politics at 0.92, and The Hill at 0.91. Two TV Shows appear — State of the Union at 0.93 and Face The Nation at 0.91 — alongside one TV Channel, ABC News Politics at 0.93. The remaining three positions belong to Political Groups: Senate Democrats at 0.92, The Democrats at 0.92, and DCCC at 0.90. No individual journalists or politicians appear in the top 10, though both subcategories are well represented in the broader neighbor set visible in the graph.
The cross-kind presence of three Political Groups alongside seven media entities is the most structurally notable feature: the audience that follows CBS News Politics overlaps as strongly with partisan organizational accounts as it does with rival broadcast and digital news outlets. That pattern suggests an audience defined less by network loyalty than by sustained engagement with the political information ecosystem as a whole.