2022
August
03
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

August 03, 2022
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

“What’s the Matter with Kansas?” The 2004 bestseller by liberal commentator Thomas Frank chronicled the rise of populist conservatism in his home state – and by extension, the United States. Now abortion-rights opponents must be asking themselves the same question: How could conservative Kansas have voted Tuesday to keep the state’s constitutional right to abortion?

It wasn’t even close. Some 59% of Kansans voted against an amendment that would have allowed the state’s supermajority Republican legislature to tighten restrictions or ban abortion outright. Legislators had scheduled the referendum for primary day, with typically low turnout that gives the most motivated voters outsize influence.

Turns out it was abortion-rights supporters – mostly Democrats and unaffiliated voters, and yes, many Republicans – who were more motivated, defying polls that had pointed to a close result. MSNBC’s Steve Kornacki suggests “at least 20% of R’s were No’s.”

In this first test of voter sentiment since the Supreme Court overturned the nationwide right to abortion, there are lessons for everyone.

Foremost, Kansas reminds us that voters do not necessarily embrace their party’s entire platform. Some Republicans lean libertarian on social issues – that is, they don’t want the government telling people what to do on personal matters. They may oppose abortion for themselves or loved ones, but aren’t comfortable with tough restrictions or bans.

Second, Kansas showed the power of organizing. The high court’s June 24 ruling overturning Roe v. Wade was “a wakeup call for a lot of moderate Kansans who weren’t engaged on this issue because they thought there was federal protection for abortion care,” Ashley All of Kansans for Constitutional Freedom, the main organization opposing the amendment, told FiveThirtyEight.

After June 24, more than 500 people a week volunteered to do voter outreach, up from 44 volunteers a week, Ms. All added. With nearby states severely restricting or banning abortion, Kansas has become a regional hub for the procedure.

Kansans who support abortion rights are angry – rocket fuel for voter mobilization. “Anger is the best motivator for turnout,” says Democratic pollster Celinda Lake.

But Tuesday’s vote does not necessarily foretell Democratic success in November. The economy remains issue No. 1 for most, though views on abortion could swing close races.

Anti-abortion forces are undaunted. Value Them Both, a pro-amendment group, tweeted last night: “This outcome is a temporary setback, and our dedicated fight to value women and babies is far from over.”


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Stripped bare, the drone strike that killed Al Qaeda’s leader in Afghanistan’s capital exposes a lack of trust between the U.S. and Taliban. But was their agreement broken, or were there just differing views on how to keep it?

A deeper look

Ann Hermes/Staff
“We [can] expose our kids to technology that we otherwise wouldn’t be able to purchase ourselves," says Jeremy Yamaguchi, a Placentia City Council member, with his daughter Elizabeth, and the telescope they borrowed from the Placentia Library in California.

Through ingenuity and bold ideas, many libraries are ensuring their relevance as community hubs now and in the future. They’re offering not just books but also nontraditional objects and fun activities.

Q&A

How can urban planning enhance heat resilience? Researchers say cooperation is key.

Film

Universal Pictures/AP
Daniel Kaluuya (left), Keke Palmer (center), and Brandon Perea star in “Nope,” a recent film from director Jordan Peele.

People have come to expect an overt message about Black life when Jordan Peele makes a film. But for our columnist, Mr. Peele’s latest film, “Nope,” liberates the director by allowing him simply to be a Black man creating a work of art. 

Courtesy of Inshah Bashir
Inshah Bashir, who started using a wheelchair as a teenager, has traveled around India and the world to compete in wheelchair basketball tournaments and attended a sports leadership program in the United States in 2019.

In Kashmir, where traditional culture and lack of resources make it difficult for disabled women to live independent lives, a wheelchair basketball team is offering hope.


The Monitor's View

When the African National Congress (ANC) became South Africa’s first democratically elected ruling party in 1994, it promised that state-owned enterprises like utilities and the national airline would reflect “a public consciousness.” That meant that the companies would model the country’s diversity and be engines of shared prosperity.

Three decades later – with the ANC still in power – many of those enterprises are in shambles. One recent report found that public entities are hobbled by “crumbling infrastructure, poor and ever-changing leadership, corruption, wasteful expenditure and mismanagement of funds” and owe roughly $42 billion in debt.

The most conspicuous example is Eskom, the state electricity company. Its aging power plants and financial troubles have resulted in rolling blackouts – or “load shedding” – that put customers in the dark for up to 12 hours at a time. Yet that dysfunction may now have a silver lining: a corrective impulse toward honest government after years of unbridled graft.

At its midsummer party conference last weekend, the ANC backed a plan by President Cyril Ramaphosa allowing new private energy production. That signaled a shift away from the party’s conviction that only the state can fairly protect the public good – a belief shaped by the inequalities of the apartheid era, when the Black majority was largely excluded from the formal economy.

It also reflected a rare admission of failure and need for greater transparency in government. “Our weaknesses are evident in the distrust, the disillusionment, the frustration that is expressed by many toward [the ANC] movement and government,” Mr. Ramaphosa told the party gathering. “The people of South Africa will never forgive us if we abandon ... confronting wrongdoing within our ranks.”

That contrition may provide a model for other societies like Sri Lanka and Pakistan that are grappling with the economic damage caused by corruption and mismanagement. According to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, 1 in 5 of the world’s largest enterprises are state-owned. That marks an upward trend. At their best, public entities can seed the development of new industries and ensure the provision of essential public services. But they can undermine competition and are prone to abuse.

Mr. Ramaphosa is attempting to uproot a culture of corruption in the ANC that cost the state an estimated $17 billion during the nine-year presidency of his predecessor, Jacob Zuma. A government inquiry found that state entities like Eskom were portals for graft and abuse.

As it turns out, an acute energy emergency and its economic consequences may be the spark for needed reform. “The crisis that we are facing ... is a call for all South Africans to be part of the solution,” Mr. Ramaphosa said in a national address last month.

An entrenched ruling party that opinion polls show has lost the public’s faith may be starting to restore the public good above its own. That reset starts with the humility to see that societies build through honest and shared enterprise.


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 faced with a problem, why turn to prayer for solutions? For an athlete experiencing a recurring illness that hindered him from running longer distances, that question felt very real – and the inspiration and healing that occurred through relying on Christian Science have had a lasting impact in his life.


A message of love

Mohammad Ponir Hossain/Reuters
A girl flies a kite in the afternoon in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Aug. 3, 2022.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us. Please come again tomorrow, when we examine how the U.S. Supreme Court has become the ultimate “decider” on many issues – and how other countries handle their judiciaries.

More issues

2022
August
03
Wednesday

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