2024
January
26
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 26, 2024
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

American politics loves binary thinking: We’re on one team, on one side of an issue or the other. 

Monitor writers recognize how limited (and limiting) that thinking is. And none is better at exploring what lies between extremes – and how thought there can evolve – than Harry Bruinius. 

Harry’s smart, but that’s not the sole source of his power. It’s also this:

“Every time I approach someone who’s sharing their story ... to really share who they are, what their experiences are, how they’ve changed because of certain experiences,” he says, “I want to listen.” 

Today, Harry describes his ongoing reporting about a group that’s often painted as one block. It’s actually one in which outlooks vary, and sometimes change.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Taylor Luck
Mohammed Al Araareh, a Bedouin shepherd who just weeks before had been pushed off his land by settler attacks, points to the valley where armed settlers clashed with another shepherd, in Rammun, West Bank, Jan. 20, 2024.

Monitor reporters witnessed a shooting attack by West Bank settlers on Palestinian shepherds as an Israeli army jeep stood by. Officials and diplomats say the attacks further a campaign they’ve warned of for years: to push Palestinians off their lands.

Today’s news briefs

• Trump defamation suit. A jury awards an additional $83.3 million to E. Jean Carroll, who says former President Donald Trump damaged her reputation by calling her a liar after she accused him of a sexual assault.

• Israel’s conduct rebuked. In a genocide case brought by South Africa, the International Court of Justice demands that Israel try to contain death and damage in its military offensive in Gaza.

• Finns head to polls. Six men and three women are running to replace President Sauli Niinistö in Jan. 28 elections. In Finland, the president holds executive power in formulating foreign and security policy.

• U.S. schools target vaping. Many are installing sensors and cameras, and handing out harsh punishments. Electronic cigarettes, which millions of minors report using, can deliver higher concentrations of nicotine than tobacco cigarettes.

Read these news briefs.

In Georgia, details of a district attorney’s relationship with a prosecutor she hired have sparked calls for her to step aside. The situation complicates a high-stakes lawsuit against Donald Trump. 

The Explainer

Leah Millis/Reuters
Supporters of President Joe Biden's $430 billion plan for student debt relief march near the White House in Washington after a U.S. Supreme Court decision blocking the plan, June 30, 2023.

The Biden administration is forgiving the college debt of thousands of Americans, including nurses and firefighters. What does the latest plan entail?

Podcast

Listen: Behind the fervent voices that sway a party’s politics

Evangelical Christians get tagged as having an unwavering, lock-step mindset when it comes to their politics. Our writer has developed an ear for the overlaps and differences in perspectives among the group’s traditionalists, modifiers, and defectors. He joined our podcast to explain.

Understanding Evangelicals

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Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff

Understanding progress takes time – and data. In our roundup, a long-term experiment of basic income in Kenya yields some surprises, and a globally focused climate tool traces millions of sources of emissions.

Staff

The Monitor's View

REUTERS
Sheikh Hasina, the newly elected prime minister of Bangladesh, meets foreign observers of the country's election, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Jan. 8.

Perhaps the biggest surprise in this week’s Republican presidential primary in New Hampshire wasn’t that Donald Trump won but that voter turnout was a record high. In other words, GOP voters – who mostly believe fraud was behind Joe Biden’s national win in 2020 – thoroughly trusted the electoral system in a state where Mr. Biden clearly won. Their faith in the system said more than the primary’s result.

Such triumphs for honesty in elections – that is, honesty in ballot counting and truthfulness in accepting a valid count – are what may help ensure the comeback of democracy in a year with a near-record number of elections worldwide.

Nearly half of the global population will cast ballots for national leaders in 2024, including voters in the United States. In most of these contests, civic-minded electoral officials will try to follow recognized international standards, such as impartiality and transparency. Yet even these officials often welcome an extra layer of protection for the sovereignty of individual citizens to shape their governance through the ballot. They invite neutral foreign observers – as New Hampshire has done – who are well steeped in electoral “best practices” to scrutinize the process.

A number of groups, such as The Carter Center in Atlanta, offer this service of expert observation and expert correction. Perhaps the most influential is the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, or OSCE, which has observed more than 400 elections over the last 30 years on either side of the Atlantic. Founded during the Cold War, the Vienna-based group – with countries ranging from Canada to Russia – is a watchdog for civic rights and fundamental freedoms within its 57 member states.

“By helping to increase public confidence in the honesty of the election process, election observation ... builds trust in elected representatives and democratic institutions,” Matteo Mecacci, director of the OSCE’s Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, wrote in the EUobserver this week.

The OSCE, for example, called out the United States to make electoral reforms after the 2020 and 2022 elections. It is helping tiny Moldova withstand Russia’s malign influence on voters before a March presidential election. And when the authoritarian leader of Belarus refused to allow OSCE monitors to observe this February’s parliamentary vote, the organization lamented that citizens will not benefit from “an impartial, transparent, and comprehensive assessment” of the election.

Such international observers are beacons for the universal values of democratic government. Those values, if honored, help create trust in a free and fair election. As Mr. Mecacci states, “Trust is key to any election.”

And it certainly was key for Republicans in New Hampshire to accept Mr. Trump’s win in the first primary of the 2024 presidential election.


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.

God is always sustaining us and supplying our needs, as a woman learned when family funds were tight.


Viewfinder

Inna Varenytsia/Reuters
A Ukrainian service member of the 80th Separate Galician Air Assault Brigade makes a snow angel in a bomb crater at a position near Bakhmut, Ukraine, Jan. 25, 2024.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for ending your Friday with us. Come back next week. China’s population has dropped for the second year in a row. We’re working on a report, with graphics, on what that may mean for the future – and what’s happening globally with demographics. 

More issues

2024
January
26
Friday

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