2022
November
16
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 16, 2022
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

You know what lost in the 2022 midterm elections? Meanness.

Take Kari Lake, Republican candidate for governor in Arizona. At a campaign stop she made a flippant joke about the hammer attack on Paul Pelosi, Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband, who was hospitalized. She often called the late Sen. John McCain of Arizona a “loser,” and at rallies said McCain Republicans could “get the [expletive] out.”

She embraced former President Donald Trump’s false claims of 2020 fraud. At one stop she pointed at the press corral and said, “These [expletive] don’t want us talking about the stolen election.”

Ms. Lake lost. 

John Fetterman, Democratic Senate candidate in Pennsylvania, had a stroke in May. This fall, Republicans mocked his health condition. Donald Trump Jr. questioned Mr. Fetterman’s mental state in harsh terms. RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel asked whether he could speak a full sentence.

Mr. Fetterman won.

Then there were the ranks of election deniers. Dozens of them won – mainly incumbent members of Congress.

But virtually every Republican candidate who embraced the false notion 2020 was stolen and who ran for a top office in a battleground state lost. 

Then many did something surprising. They conceded.

Doug Mastriano, who was at the Jan. 6 Capitol rally, lost his race for Pennsylvania governor. Instead of charging fraud he issued a statement saying opponent Josh Shapiro had won, and that everyone should “pray he leads well.”

If 2020 weakened the American tradition of peaceful transfers of power, 2022 may have repaired some of the damage.

“I am grateful ... for those Republican and Democratic candidates who showed their patriotism by gracefully conceding their races,” tweeted MSNBC host Joe Scarborough. “In a campaign year when little can be taken for granted, it matters.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Malcolm Denemark/Florida Today/AP
NASA's new moon rocket lifts off from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral early Wednesday morning, Nov. 16, 2022, as seen from Harbortown Marina on Merritt Island, Florida. The moon is visible in the sky. The space agency's goal in this 25-day uncrewed mission is to demonstrate the Orion spacecraft’s systems, including a safe return to Earth, prior to the Artemis program's first flight with crew.

A NASA launch Wednesday is designed to pave the way for humans to return to the lunar surface after a five-decade gap. The motivations go far beyond exploring the moon itself.

A Trump-backed incumbent finds herself in a tighter race than expected. As election workers persevere, the nail-biter has demanded patience from a far-flung voter base.

SOURCE:

Colorado Independent Redistricting Commissions, New York Times

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Aaron Favila/AP
Activists hold slogans as they condemn the killing of Filipino journalist Percival Mabasa during a rally in Quezon City, Philippines on Oct. 4, 2022. Motorcycle-riding gunmen killed the longtime radio commentator in the latest attack on a member of the media in the Philippines, considered one of the world's most dangerous countries for journalists.

In a country where journalists are killed with impunity, the investigation into Percival Mabasa’s homicide is seeing progress. Can it offer lessons on seeking justice?

Commentary

Victoria Will/Invision/AP/File
Chadwick Boseman, shown in 2018 promoting “Black Panther,” became an icon to many. The sequel, “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” is meant to be a goodbye to both the character King T’Challa and the late actor.

The “Black Panther” sequel presents the opportunity to mourn the death of a beloved actor, but also to consider his powerful legacy of perseverance.

Books

Our reviewers’ picks for this month include a novel about the tensions between individuality and idealism, a Muslim American mystery, and a biography that unfolds contradictions in the lives of two abolitionist sisters.  


The Monitor's View

Reuters
Members-elect from the U.S. House of Representatives prepare for a group photo outside of the U.S. Capitol building in Washington, Nov. 15.

In the 2022 elections for the U.S. Congress, the most important voters turned out to be independents, according to exit polls. They were 31% of the electorate – the highest tally since 1980. Many split their tickets between Republicans and Democrats, chose character over ideology, and – perhaps most importantly – pushed the coming legislature into what the founders preferred: constitutional equipoise. The GOP appears set to control the House while Democrats will hold the Senate – both but barely.

If each party now honors the spirit of those independent voters, the 118th Congress could produce less divided government and more shared government.

Partisan gridlock can frustrate partisan activists in Congress, but it also can force elected representatives to act as cross-the-aisle legislators – to listen for “the cool and deliberate sense of the community,” as James Madison put it. Without clear majorities in either chamber, the parties must now work in harmony and equilibrium, like two individuals in a three-legged race, passing bills that reflect balance – the oft-neglected word in “checks and balance.”

“I’m going to say to my party, ‘We are not going to get everything we want; we’re going to have to compromise,’” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told The New York Times.

Rep. Nancy Mace, a Republican from South Carolina, told CNN, “I really hope that when we get into the next legislative term, we look at what is going to bring our nation together.”

A poll last year of those who voted in the 2020 elections found three enduring bonds of the American civic community. Despite a wide partisan divide, citizens embrace equality, liberty, and progress, according to the survey by the Siena College Research Institute. The poll revealed an “assertion that those values guide us in our thoughts and actions on a daily basis,” says the institute’s director, Don Levy.

Independents have helped set a tone for post-election harmony in Congress. “In recent elections, both parties have resorted to the politics of fear and anger – which may appeal to the base, but independents see it as only adding to the animosity dividing the country,” David Winston, a Republican pollster and strategist with the Winston Group, wrote in Roll Call. 

Many Americans hold strong fears that those on the other side of the political spectrum will harm the United States. One antidote to such fears lies in advice given by the late Queen Elizabeth II in 2011, a few months after she became the first reigning British monarch to visit the Republic of Ireland. She spoke of forgiveness, saying it “can heal broken families, it can restore friendships, and it can reconcile divided communities. It is in forgiveness that we feel the power of God’s love.”

In the results of the midterm elections, independent voters could have delivered a subtle message. It is that Congress must be less a pit of competing and unpardonable villains and more a den of forgiving and collaborative hearts, one where a suspension of ego and grievance can lead to equipoise in governance.


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.

If it seems we’re coming up short – with health, finances, or something else – getting to know God as the source of unlimited, universal goodness is a solid foundation for progress.


A message of love

Juan Karita/AP
Indigenous Aymara women walk to the sacred mountain Inca Pucara for a day of prayer and fasting in a call for rain in Chiquipata, Bolivia, Nov. 16, 2022. Residents in the highlands of La Paz say the lack of rain and frost since September is not allowing them to plant potatoes, beans, carrots, and peas.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Come back tomorrow, when we’ll have a story about the impact of the U.S. midterm elections around the world.

More issues

2022
November
16
Wednesday

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