2019
December
12
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 12, 2019
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

Our five stories today look at what a burned shrine in Iraq says about Iranian power; why impeachment may not sway votes in swing districts; why Russian athletes are fed up – with their government; why U.S. students are suing for the right to learn civics; and our film critic’s 10 best movies of the year.

Our reporter Simon Montlake has been in London and Scotland all week, covering the United Kingdom’s fifth major vote in five years. We’ll have a full report from him for you tomorrow. But today, Simon shared some observations from his chats with voters. 

“I spent the morning outside a polling station inside a Jewish primary school in North London,” Simon says. “It was rainy and gray, but there was a constant stream of voters, young and old, families and single professionals, and most were happy to stop and talk after casting their ballot.”

Many seemed doubtful that this election will resolve the vexed issue of Brexit. “No matter who wins, we’ve become so divided,” Lynda Carter, a retiree, told Simon. 

This parliamentary seat is held by Boris Johnson’s Conservatives, who face a strong challenger in Luciana Berger, a former Labour MP who quit the party over anti-Semitism (she is Jewish). 

“Our choices are between bad and worse,” Afsanah, an accountant, told him.

She voted for Ms. Berger to stop the Conservatives and Brexit. That was preferable to voting for Labour, whose leader, Jeremy Corbyn, is widely criticized for failing to root out anti-Semitism. 

Several Jewish voters said they feared a Corbyn victory. “It’s a vote for my family’s safety,” one man said after voting Conservative. 

Errol Danziger, a management consultant, voted Conservative and was hopeful that the U.K. would finally leave the European Union. “We have to get out,” he said. “We have to make our own opportunities.”

Another Jewish man said he voted for Ms. Berger. But he was sanguine about Brexit, even though he saw it as a mistake. “We accept the results of the referendum. That’s democracy.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/The Christian Science Monitor
A burnt entrance and broken glass mark the aftermath of days of anti-Iranian attacks in late November against the shrine complex devoted to Ayatollah Mohammad Bakr al-Hakkim, the leader of the Iran-backed Badr Brigade militia, in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, Iraq, Dec. 9, 2019.
Riley Robinson/The Christian Science Monitor
Students, parents, and lawyers cheer "Civics!" after a hearing in federal court on Dec. 5, 2019, in Providence, Rhode Island. Through a lawsuit, they hope to establish a constitutional right to an adequate public education that prepares students for civic life.
COURTESY OF NEON
Documentary "Honeyland" is about Hatidze Muratova, a beekeeper in what is now North Macedonia. It brims with universal truths about the human condition.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
Poland's Belchatow Power Station is Europe's largest coal-fired power plant.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Jorge Silva/Reuters
A police officer and a man perform a Hongi after a ceremony called “Karakia,” attended by Ngati Awa representatives and relatives of the volcano eruption victims at Mataatua Marae house in Whakatane, New Zealand, Dec. 12, 2019. The White Island volcano erupted on Monday, killing at least eight people.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Tomorrow, we look at whether internet access should be a human right – and the court in South Africa that ruled in favor.

More issues

2019
December
12
Thursday
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