2019
January
29
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 29, 2019
Loading the player...

In a bitterly divided nation, the political path to the White House runs down the middle.

That’s what former Starbucks chief executive officer Howard Schultz says as he contemplates running for president as an independent moderate. “The American people are exhausted. Their trust has been broken. And they are looking for a better choice,” he told “60 Minutes” Sunday.

A possible campaign slogan: “Make moderation great again.”

But Mr. Schultz would be running against a history of failed third-party campaigns. Conventional wisdom says a Schultz candidacy would simply peel off Democratic voters, helping President Trump win reelection.

What’s the unconventional wisdom?

American voters may be as fed up with Democrats and Republicans as they were in 1992. That’s when another independent businessman, Ross Perot, was ahead of Bill Clinton and President George H.W. Bush in the polls just five months before the election. For a variety of reasons, his campaign imploded.

A Schultz campaign could be a good barometer of what voters want in a leader. The current flock of Democratic candidates leans ever leftward (more on them in tomorrow’s edition), perhaps creating an opening for a centrist. And if you ask Americans whether a major third party is needed, 57 percent say yes.

Voters are ever alert for a path to progress. In 2016, they elected an unconventional real estate billionaire. The electorate may be so eager for relief from political head-butting that they give moderation a try in 2020.

Now to our five selected stories, including the price of uncertainty in the US economy, a video about how individual values can address our apparent prejudices, and a way to measure love for children in cities.


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Brendan McDermid/Reuters
A National Park Service worker cleans up outside the Federal Hall National Memorial in New York after the US government reopened, allowing about 800,000 federal employees to go back to work after a 35-day shutdown.

Consumers, businesses, and investors loathe uncertainty. Our reporters look at how the true cost of the government shutdown may go beyond lost sales.

Fernando Llano/AP
Opposition National Assembly leader Juan Guaidó (r.), who has declared himself Venezuela’s interim president, greeted supporters as he left church in Caracas Jan. 27.

If you look at who is on either side of Venezuela’s political standoff, you’ll see a global power struggle between authoritarian and democratic models of government.

It’s a natural cycle: After war comes rebuilding. But Western and Arab nations are not yet in sync transitioning from a confrontational mentality to a framework of renewal.

Video

Confronting ‘intergroup anxiety’: Can you try too hard to be fair?

Our next story includes a video about how our values can compensate for personal anxiety and awkwardness over appearing biased toward minorities. 

The science of intergroup anxiety

For students to succeed, they often need help with more than just academics. A new tool measures many ways cities support equitable education, and encourages collective care.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Demonstrators march in anti-government protests in Khartoum, Sudan, Dec. 25.

In its latest survey of 180 countries by levels of corruption, Transparency International tried something different. For the first time, the global watchdog group measured links between public-sector corruption and each country’s basic freedoms, rule of law, and democracy. The researchers need not look too far to find current negative examples.

In recent weeks, the world has witnessed mass protests in two of the most-corrupt countries, Sudan and Venezuela, which are also among the most nondemocratic. Each country could be on the brink of regime change. In each country, demonstrators demand the kind of honesty and accountability in governance that they see in healthy democracies.

In Sudan, which is Africa’s third-biggest country, the regime chose to balance its budget by raising bread prices rather than by reducing corruption. The move brought people into the streets in unprecedented unity across ethnic divisions. In Venezuela, the siphoning of oil wealth for the political elite and military brass finally united the opposition in the elected legislature and led to popular demands for an end to a culture of impunity.

The report found full democracies scored an average of 75 out of 100 on the corruption index. Flawed democracies averaged 49 while autocratic regimes averaged 30. Yet the real value in the survey lies in a list of countries that have reduced corruption by improving their democracies. That link was clear.

In the past seven years, 20 countries have made such progress. They include Estonia in Europe, Senegal and Ivory Coast in Africa, and Guyana in South America. None are perfect. Even Denmark, a strong democracy that is also ranked as the least corrupt, saw its largest bank caught in a huge money-laundering scheme last year. Yet nations on the list can provide lessons for the majority of countries that remain below average in the TI rankings.

Anti-corruption reforms in Senegal and Ivory Coast, for example, are a result of a new “political will ... demonstrated by their respective leaders.” In Argentina, Ecuador, and El Salvador, reform is led by better investigations in corruption cases against high-profile individuals, including some former presidents. Estonia’s progress is a result of radical reform of the courts and public administration, a relatively clean privatization of state enterprises, and digital transparency in government dealings.

Among its own recommendations, TI researchers cite the need for a broad societal consensus in favor of integrity in public institutions. “Engagement of citizens in oversight of government decisions and spending, particularly at the local level, not only crowd-sources accountability but promises to re-invigorate the democratic process,” the report states.

So while watching protests like those in Sudan or Venezuela, it is helpful to view them as simply an outbreak of citizen engagement in favor of integrity. Many other countries have been there, done that.


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.

When today’s contributor was pulled over and the police officers became belligerent, prayer and a desire to help others do what’s right kept him calm, paving the way for a peaceful and fair outcome.


A message of love

Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi/AP
Zimbabwe lawyers take part in a protest over rule of law concerns in Harare Jan. 29. The lawyers handed over a petition to the country’s chief justice in a bid to stop human rights abuses in the country. Zimbabwe’s president on Monday said he was “appalled” by a televised report showing abuses by security forces in a continuing crackdown after angry protests against the government's drastic fuel-price hikes.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow: We’re working on a story about how the US Social Security Administration may offer a novel way to stop identity theft.

More issues

2019
January
29
Tuesday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.