2018
August
16
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 16, 2018
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Kim Campbell
Culture & Education Editor

Back-to-school season has begun, and with it are a number of “firsts.”

One Alabama county opened its first integrated school this week, almost 50 years after the state was ordered to desegregate by federal courts. Of the more than 300 students at University Charter School in Livingston, more than half are black. Only 24 percent of Sumter County’s residents are white, but just under half of the students in the school are. That racial balance is an accomplishment, considering that white flight has thwarted past desegregation efforts in the area. "This is an historic day and an historic mission," principal John Cameron said on Monday. The Monitor is keeping track of other approaches to integration in its Learning Together series

Unlike in Alabama, where parents hope the new school will bring the community together, some parents in Puerto Rico – where school also started this week – are concerned about a plan to use charter schools there having the opposite effect.

The US territory’s first charter school will open on Monday in San Juan, after a court battle over constitutionality was recently resolved. One parent, from the central mountainous town of Guaynabo, spoke with Monitor correspondent Whitney Eulich in March. Evelyn Ortiz explained how the school her special-needs daughter attended before it closed was the “heart” of the community. Will a charter prioritize local unity and needs, educators and parents wonder?

Charter schools are a tinderbox issue, perhaps more so now with the current administration pushing for more parent choice. These two examples offer fodder for the debate – for while charters may prove to be the answer to more equity in Alabama, they may not in Puerto Rico.

Now to our five stories for Thursday. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Climate change, which many skeptics argue is more bark than bite, is starting to demonstrate an impact on economies – and perceptions.

For Catholics, the past two decades have forced the faithful to grapple with wide-spread sexual abuse among clergy. Now, as other traditions discover similar predators among their ranks, a new report still has the power to shock the nation, as well as those still seeking solace in the church.

Saudi Arabia's young and powerful crown prince has billed himself as a reformer, modernizer, and liberal. So the kingdom's summer of jailed activists and a feud with Canada is a puzzlement.

Thin blue line

America confronts a police shortage
Ted S. Warren/AP
Police officer Inci Yarkut (l.) and embedded social worker Kaitlyn Dowd make contact with a homeless man in Everett, Wash., in 2017. The number of unsheltered chronically homeless people with substance abuse and other challenges has risen sharply in the region, as elsewhere. Partnering social workers with police officers is helping the city to deal with the crisis.

How does policing change when officers are trained to think differently? This story looks at an approach that helps officers in Washington more safely interact with people exhibiting signs of mental illness.

Books

The Silk Road from a bicycle seat. A satirical novel with Shakespeare as a character. Iraq and Afghanistan through the experiences of six service members. The genius of Chopin. All are among our picks for the great books of August. 


The Monitor's View

AP Photo
Rep. Martha McSally, R-Ariz., third from left, gets her arm raised by former Arizona Republican Gov. Jan Brewer, third from right, as they pose with members of the Women's Coalition at a campaign event for McSally's Senate primary race Aug. 15 in Phoenix. McSally, Kelli Ward and former Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio are vying for the Republican nomination.

While political pundits debate the possibility of a “blue wave” – a Democratic Party landslide – in November’s elections, less has been said about a possible “pink wave” – the election of an unprecedented number of women to public office.

One recent survey showed that in as many as nine states, women could make up the majority of legislators, something no state has ever done. On average, women now occupy about one-fourth of the seats in the 50 state legislatures. In addition, a record 19 women have won major-party nominations for the US Senate while 11 women have been nominated for gubernatorial races and at least 185 women have won nominations in House races, according to the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

Some women have garnered national attention. Twenty-something Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez gained attention when she upset a veteran incumbent congressman in a New York Democratic Party primary race. Less in the spotlight are others, such as Kristi Noem, a Republican expected to become the first woman governor of South Dakota.

And the list goes on. So many women are running for office that some have faced or are facing other women candidates in either their party primaries or in the general election.

Some observers see no news here. Voters should take a blind eye when it comes to the gender of a candidate, they argue. No “quota” by gender is wanted or needed. But for others the importance of gender balance is obvious. A few years back when Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was asked why he appointed an equal number of women and men to his cabinet, he replied: “Because it’s 2015.”

Other countries have made similar efforts to balance governing cabinets, the members of which aren’t elected but chosen by a chief executive. In Spain, 11 of the 17 government ministries are now headed by women. In France, President Emmanuel Macron’s cabinet is made up of 11 women and 11 men. (President Trump has six women in his cabinet or in cabinet-level positions out of 23 total positions, 26 percent. That figure is roughly comparable to the previous two US presidents, Barack Obama and George W. Bush, whose percentage of women cabinet members through their combined 16 years in office ranged between 19 and 35 percent.)

Women who win elections this fall will have to persuade not a single leader but the majority of voters that they are best suited to do the job.

Traditionally, women voters have largely ignored the sex of the candidate as a decisive issue in favor of party affiliation or other factors such as incumbency. In 2016 Hillary Clinton won only 54 percent of women’s votes; her male opponent, Mr. Trump, actually won 52 percent of white women voters.

But a recent survey shows younger women, ages 18 to 34, may be more ready to back candidates on the basis of gender. Nearly a third of these women say they’d prefer to vote for another woman, compared with 19 percent of all women. Another poll found 65 percent of women 18 to 44 say the United States would be better off if more women served in public office. Older women and men were much less likely to hold this view.

Would a greater percentage of women in office change the nation’s direction or priorities? That remains to be seen. But just as the election of President Obama assured racial minorities that they, too, were included in the political system, more women in office can assure the female half of the American public that the opportunity to serve in elected office is more open to them than ever.


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.

Amid a world scene in which the noise of derision and division headlines the news almost daily, today’s column considers the unifying power of understanding how God harmoniously governs us.


A message of love

AP/File
Aretha Franklin appears at a news conference in March 1973. The influential, powerful-voiced ‘Queen of Soul’ died Thursday and is being remembered for her dynamic career. Writing in a 1998 Monitor story marking the release of two new Franklin compilations, a reviewer said: 'This memorable collection … succeeds because of Franklin's intensely passionate soaring vocals, conveying a hauntingly upbeat interpretation of the blues, the music of spiritual endurance.'
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow when we'll look at Pakistan's next prime minister ahead of his swearing in. Many Pakistanis see Imran Khan as a new kind of leader for their country. But how much room for change will he really have?

News today of the death of Aretha Franklin had our staff comparing their favorite performances, from the time she stepped in with little notice for an ailing Luciano Pavarotti to perform "Nessun Dorma" at the 1998 Grammys to recording sessions in the music documentary "Muscle Shoals." Here's the "Queen of Soul" bringing former President Barack Obama to tears at the 2015 Kennedy Center Honors.

More issues

2018
August
16
Thursday

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