2017
July
21
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

July 21, 2017
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

Americans are paying closer attention to national politics. 

A survey released Thursday by the Pew Research Center found that 52 percent say they are focusing more since the presidential election.

Are national politicians paying enough attention to Americans? Washington has been inward-looking – the investigating of the investigators, the prospect of presidential self-pardon, today’s drama on the White House communications team, with Sean Spicer resigning as press secretary.

Yes, some work is getting done, six months into the new administration. Just yesterday the federal government reported that it had shut down two major online black markets. But is there enough looking outward – and ahead? On Wednesday, Axios reported that a House subcommittee was scrambling to pull together “an unheralded but consequential hearing” aimed at trying to get regulations in place ahead of the autonomous-car boom. Drones will need attention, too. A sobering report this week projected a staggering global volume of plastic waste by 2050.

A debt ceiling is coming up fast. So is debate over tax reform. A Fox News graphic Tuesday paraphrased the president on health care: “Eventually we will get something done.”

That would get Americans’ attention. 

Now to our five stories for today. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Attorney General Jeff Sessions may be adding to his hard-liner credentials with his push on civil asset forfeiture. But that’s contributing to a broader rift in the GOP over law and order. Patrik Jonsson and Henry Gass report.

Ammar Awad/Reuters
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (c.) speaks to Syrian refugees during his visit to Al Zaatari refugee camp in the Jordanian city of Mafraq, near the border with Syria, on March 28, 2017.

What happens to global relief work if the United States eases off its financing and leadership? Not much, if the United Nations can succeed in its effort to become more nimble, and then accelerates toward its goals. 

Into an epicenter of drought, famine, and fortitude

In her 32 years at the Monitor, Melanie Stetson Freeman has worked on assignment in more than 70 countries. She covered 9/11, and ventured into Afghanistan a few years after that. This work was different. Shooting images and video for our forthcoming series on famine was not only challenging logistically but also, in her words, “one of the hardest trips, emotionally, I’ve ever taken.” In Ethiopia she battled a closed-door bureaucracy for access. In Madagascar, an island that much of the world associates with lemurs, she was confronted with widespread child malnutrition. Mel – and the Monitor reporters alongside her – also found hope. Our series begins Monday. This video offers a preview.

Aid for Ethiopia's deadly drought could soon run out

Points of Progress

What's going right
Courtesy of Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer's office
A member of Troop 6000, which meets at a shelter in the New York borough of Queens, receives a pin. The troop was the first in New York specifically designed to give the city's estimated 6,000 homeless girls a sense of community.

A local movement that started small early this year is now positioned to ramp up over the next few years – and to answer a question that nags at many of those living in shelters: "Where do I belong?"

Eoin O’Carroll looked into a well-intentioned effort in Uganda to help preserve forest cover and found a complex case of economic and social justice. 


The Monitor's View

Reuters
People protest in Wroclaw, Poland, July 20, against a measure by the ruling to party to control the supreme court.

Poland’s government, elected in 2015 with 38 percent of the vote, appears to be on a collision course with the European Union. It has begun to pass bills that usurp the independence of the courts, giving the ruling party the ability to influence cases, punish its opponents, and stay in power. The sudden moves have led tens of thousands of Poles to take to the streets in protest. They have also shocked EU leaders, who never imagined a member state would violate a core principle of the Union. In fact, the EU has few tools to punish Poland.

One of the EU’s great triumphs is the spread of the idea that people should be treated equally before the law. This principle has helped Europe end a history of war rooted on the notion that ethnicity, religion, or class allows one group to be superior to the law while denying rights to others. In a twist on that theme, Poland’s governing Law and Justice party claims a democratic victory alone justifies an end to judicial independence, not to mention an end to the checks and balances built into a separation of powers. The nationalist party has also tried to clip media freedom and abortion rights. Those efforts have been mostly thwarted by mass outcry.

The street protests to save judicial independence, however, may not work. The EU is now seen as the best interlocutor. It has an option to curb funding for Poland. If the EU wants to stand up for rule of law in global affairs, as well as entice new members such as Ukraine to join, it must take a hard line with Poland, the EU’s sixth most populous member state.

Another possible corrective may be investors. Getting rid of judicial independence creates legal uncertainty for businesses and opens a door for cronyism and corruption. Poland’s economy could see a slowdown, forcing the public to renew its faith in the courts. Then the country could restore its reputation as a model reformer among the former Soviet bloc states admitted to the EU.

The government’s argument that any political party elected to office can dictate to the courts clearly runs counter to the Continent’s embrace of universal values, which originate in a Christian understanding of equality before God. Individual rights are not subject to democratic whims. Courts serve a grander purpose than politics to decide fairness, based on values embedded in a constitution.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Can we respond with love when someone is angry with us? That’s what contributor Ellen Wolf chose to do in a tense situation. When she prayed to see beyond the indignation expressed by a man at a business where she needed to drop something off – and decided to acknowledge and love the good in him – the result was a complete transformation of his attitude. Choosing love instead of reacting with anger or hate is to follow the example of Christ Jesus, and to be true to our identity as God’s children. Christly love heals and transforms, and we all have the ability to express it.


A message of love

Charles Platiau/Reuters
Swimmers enjoy three new enclosures that were opened for use earlier this month along the Bassin de la Villette in Paris. The area, fed by water from a barge canal, uses filter mesh to keep out foreign objects. But improvements in urban water quality were essential. As the website CityLab reports: 'For years, the French capital has been promising to open up its urban waterways for safe, clean public swimming. This month, it’s done exactly that.'
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks, as always, for being here. Swing back around next week. Besides the start of the famine series that was hinted at above, we’re also working on a piece about how educators are finding ways to help refugee university students navigate Germany's demanding bureaucracy and academic requirements. 

With the debate over tax reform soon to kick into gear in Washington, here’s a weekend read from The Atlantic on Canadians’ more “transactional” approach to thinking about taxation. Essentially, you pay for what you get

More issues

2017
July
21
Friday

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