2023
March
28
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

March 28, 2023
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Ned Temko
Columnist

Like so many long-distance relationships, this one had grown sporadic and virtual during the pandemic. So when Ehud and Nili Barak visited London from Israel this week, it was a welcome opportunity to catch up at a little restaurant beside the Thames.

But Ehud and Nili aren’t just any Israelis. Ehud is the country’s most decorated soldier and a former prime minister. And this week was like no other in Israel’s history. So “catching up” covered more than just life, work, and family. It took in what Israelis call the matzav – the situation – back home.

There, unprecedentedly large protests were forcing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his far-right coalition to postpone plans to gut the independent oversight role of the Supreme Court.

I didn’t cover Ehud Barak when I reported from the Middle East. But I helped him write a remarkable 2018 memoir – appropriately called “My Country, My Life” because he has lived through, and helped shape, the entire history of Israel.

He’s also well placed to know what makes the current prime minister tick. Ehud had young Mr. Netanyahu under his special forces command a half-century ago. He outpolled Mr. Netanyahu to become prime minister. And he served later as defense minister in a Netanyahu-led coalition government.

The two men differ profoundly on many issues, including the need for a negotiated peace with the Palestinians. Ehud argues that permanent control over the West Bank will mean Israel either ceases to be a Jewish state or is no longer a democracy.

But the immediate threat to democracy, he is clear, comes from the Netanyahu government. He believes its proposed “judicial reform” would make Israel the kind of electoral autocracy that Viktor Orbán has created in Hungary.

Still, I was struck by the sense of optimism he has taken from the protests. Largely spontaneous, they have drawn newcomers to political engagement – young people, leaders of the technology sector, and members of elite military units. 

And the message he believes they have sent out is that the Netanyahu government’s “coup from above” will fail. Or, as he puts it, “Israel is not Hungary.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Aurelien Morissard/AP
A protester kicks a tear gas canister in front of the Paris Opera at the end of a rally, March 23, 2023.

Protests against President Macron's retirement reforms have inflamed France. Yet in a country where demonstrating is practically de rigueur, how much difference does marching really make in a situation like this?

A deeper look

Matthias Schrader/AP
People ski on a cross country slope in Ramsau, Austria, Jan. 6, 2023. Sparse snowfall and warm weather are preventing many European mountaintops from reaching their normal snow levels.

Climate action can be politically divisive. But a love for nature is bringing people together – even in Washington.

Commentary

Bebeto Matthews/AP/File
Judge Constance Baker Motley stands in her chambers at federal court in New York, May 7, 2004. As a young attorney for the NAACP in the 1950s, she worked on the Brown v. Board of Education school desegregation case.

March is Women’s History Month in the United States. But our contributor honors Constance Baker Motley all year long, appreciating her groundbreaking efforts to ensure civil rights for all. 

Points of Progress

What's going right

In our progress roundup, two national governments are signaling the importance of certain groups by better recognizing their needs. Spain passed laws aimed at reproductive rights and LGBTQ+ people, and Pakistan’s census is trying to capture as many citizens as possible. 


The Monitor's View

AP
Humza Yousaf gestures after being voted the new First Minister at the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, March 28.

The selection of Humza Yousaf as leader of Scotland on Tuesday marks the first time that a Western European state will be run by a Muslim. Mr. Yousaf, a second-generation descendant of Pakistani immigrants who speaks in a brogue as thick as his beard, will be sworn in tomorrow.

The meaning of that milestone itself is difficult to parse. Mr. Yousaf’s ascent contributes to a unique historic moment. The prime ministers of Ireland and Britain, along with the mayor of London and the leader of Scotland’s main opposition party, are all of South Asian descent.

That is hugely affirming for post-colonial minority communities that have struggled against discrimination in European countries like Britain, Belgium, and France. As Mr. Yousaf argued during the campaign for his party’s leadership, “greater equality actually unlocks greater growth.”

But at a time when societies from Chile to Australia are seeking new models of social justice and constitutional reforms to protect the equal dignity of all their citizens, the more significant measure of the leadership transformations in the United Kingdom and Ireland may be in their emphasis on merit over identity.

A poll of Scottish voters taken earlier this month, for instance, found that 71% and 63% saw the economy and health care, respectively, as the most important issues. At the same time, an Ipsos poll found that 75% of Britons said the economy and inflation were their top concerns, with health care following. Nowhere mentioned was the ethnicity of political leaders, and only a minority of Scottish voters (42%) support a referendum on independence – a longstanding goal of Mr. Yousaf’s ruling Scottish National Party.

Along their individual pathways to power, Mr. Yousaf and Rishi Sunak – Britain’s first prime minister of Indian descent – have both spoken passionately about their experiences with discrimination. Neither has faced voters in a general election, yet both seem to recognize the limits of identity politics. In his first speech as party leader yesterday, Mr. Yousaf tied social justice to shared economic prosperity.

That may have been a plea for time as much as it was for unity. “A better society doesn’t happen overnight,” Mr. Sunak, whose current poll numbers are sagging amid persistent economic challenges, said in 2020. “Like all great acts of creation, it happens slowly and depends on the cooperation of each of us toward that common goal.”

In the Apostle Paul’s letter to the Galatians, the insight that “there is neither Jew nor Greek” was an acknowledgment that the values of just societies are of greater importance than the material identity of those defending them – such as a Hindu-practicing Briton or a Muslim with a Scottish brogue.


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 we’re facing tragedy, considering everyone’s true nature as a child of God helps lift us out of feeling hopeless and helpless. 


Viewfinder

Don Campbell/The Herald-Palladium/AP
Fishers cast their lines into Lake Michigan as the setting sun reflects off the pier – and watchful seagulls circle overhead – in St. Joseph, Michigan, on March 27, 2023.

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Please come back tomorrow, when we’ll share a conversation held by top-ranking women in the U.S. military, who gathered recently to reflect on their careers and swap stories and advice they’d gleaned from their years of service.

More issues

2023
March
28
Tuesday

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