2022
December
20
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

December 20, 2022
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Want a good-news story from Washington? Here’s one: Congress is very close to protecting democracy by plugging holes in a crucial 135-year-old law.

At issue is the Electoral Count Act, which governs the counting of Electoral College votes and the naming of presidents-elect. Bipartisan groups of lawmakers have been working on reforming this antique for months. 

Their reform would tighten wording to ensure states submit only one slate of Electoral College electors. No fake slates of self-designated “electors,” as allies of former President Donald Trump produced after the 2020 vote.

It would state that the role of the vice president is “solely ministerial” when counting electoral votes. That would write into direct language the conclusion that many scholars – and former Vice President Mike Pence – already hold.

It would also make it harder for members of Congress to object to a state’s electors, and for state legislators to override their state’s vote.

Jan. 6 committee evidence has shown how Mr. Trump and his allies tried to manipulate the legal process to overturn a presidential vote. Electoral Count Act reform could deter that from happening again.

It has been near passage for months. Now it has been folded into the omnibus spending bill that needs to pass this week to avoid a government shutdown. That’s a crucial measure, so chances for electoral reform are good.

“Reform of the [Electoral Count Act] is the single most important reform that Congress can take to prevent future stolen elections,” UCLA professor Rick Hasen wrote today on his election law blog.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Al Drago/AP
A video of former President Donald Trump is shown as the House Jan. 6 committee holds its final meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington, Dec. 19, 2022. From left, Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla.; Rep. Pete Aguilar, D-Calif.; Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif.; Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif.; Chairman Bennie Thompson, D-Miss.; Vice Chair Liz Cheney, R-Wyo.; Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill.; Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md.; and Rep. Elaine Luria, D-Va.

Consensus is emerging among Republicans that Donald Trump is not the way forward if they want to win. But people have incorrectly written him off before. Is this time really different? 

Sara Miller Llana/The Christian Science Monitor
Yuel Tekele sits at the dinner table with his mother Simret in Toronto, December 2022. He is now 14 years old, and Ms. Tekele hadn't seen him since he was one. They are working hard to get to know one another.

Immigration almost always entails heartbreak; leaving behind loved ones and homes because of poverty or war. For one Eritrean family in Canada, reuniting with a child after 13 years is bringing renewed peace – and requiring some patience.

In eastern Germany, residents have felt historically overlooked by Berlin, and see it happening again as sanctions against Russian energy threaten their livelihoods. In one town, they’re trying to use dialogue to take back control of their future.

Points of Progress

What's going right

In this roundup, progress came from dogged effort and unique perspectives, not extraordinary science or concepts. The global examples range from trash cleanup and species recovery to easing conditions for people along an African border.

Books

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

With gratitude for our community of readers, the Monitor’s reviewers share their favorite titles this year. We hope the list will serve as a guide to books that build awareness, encourage compassion, and demonstrate our shared humanity. 


The Monitor's View

Sarah Reingewirtz/The Orange County Register via AP
Carlos Laforteza made his way through the Arts District in downtown Los Angeles, Monday, Dec. 12, 2022. The same day, Mayor Karen Bass declared a state of emergency on homelessness in her first official act.

Each year, the U.S. government does what it calls a point-in-time tally of homelessness. On a single night last January, it counted 582,462 people – some in temporary shelters, others living in their cars or on the streets.

The Biden administration yesterday launched a broad new federal strategy to cut homelessness 25% by 2025. That follows bold new measures introduced in New York and Los Angeles. These plans attempt in different ways to address what officials call the “upstream” causes of homelessness: soaring housing costs, not enough affordable housing, an inadequate minimum wage, unequal access to health care, addiction, mass incarceration, mental health problems, and the full range of social and systemic discrimination.

One developer in Los Angeles has a simpler approach. It is premised on the idea that altruism, as a business model, can build up whole communities as well as unhoused individuals and families. To put that differently, building on social positives may be a shortcut to addressing society’s negatives. In the past seven years, SoLa Impact has built more than 1,500 affordable housing units in underserved communities. An additional 5,000 are planned or under construction. 

Quantity has helped the company cut construction costs. But the key point of progress, founder Martin Muoto describes, has been changing the way investors see minority communities. “When I went into these areas, which are predominantly Black, brown areas,” he recently told NPR, “and as I’ve raised capital, a lot of folks go, boy, that sounds very risky.” The challenge is “to really look at this opportunity objectively and say, look, you can do well while doing good.” 

Providing affordable housing as a remedy for homelessness has been proved effective in cities from Columbus, Ohio, to Helsinki. It recognizes that permanent shelter is a prerequisite to restoring lives derailed by hardship, not the final step. It has been shown to be less expensive and more effective than costly public social safety nets. It honors the dignity of individuals and their inherent capacity for improvement.

“Focusing on the negative and stifled experiences of the homeless invariably produces an incomplete picture, and obscures the creative and resourceful practices that people deploy to deal with their situation,” wrote Johannes Lenhard, a research associate at the Max Planck Cambridge Centre for Ethics, Economy and Social Change, based on a 2018 study of unhoused people in Paris. 

Homelessness, observed Susie Cagle, an editorial cartoonist, in an essay in Aeon in 2015, “has always been more a crisis of empathy and imagination than one of sheer economics.” As city and federal officials grapple anew with the complex web of social ills resulting in homelessness, Mr. Muoto’s work suggests something different: that uplifting unhoused people and the communities around them involves an economics of empathy and imagination.


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.

A spiritual approach to living in the present can release us from anxiety and pressure, but it can also do more – bringing us into a clearer awareness of our Father, God, where we find healing.


A message of love

Mario De Fina/AP
Argentine soccer fans descend on downtown Buenos Aires, Argentina, for a homecoming parade on Dec. 20, 2022, to honor the Argentine soccer team – led by captain Lionel Messi – that won the World Cup tournament.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow to see how darkness enlightens and inspires in Texas Hill Country.

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2022
December
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