2025
January
07
Tuesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 07, 2025
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Today’s Daily reminds me why the Monitor matters. Stephanie Hanes shows intimately how one Florida town speaks to the changes being wrought by fiercer storms worldwide. And Kate Okorie gives us a glimpse of what the world can be when resilience is met with an embrace.

Both stories reject the blinding tendency to focus only on short-term crisis. Instead, they explore different aspects of two key global trends – extreme weather and war. In the process, the authors help us see the world differently and more deeply.


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News briefs

• Trump case sentencing: Despite President-elect Donald Trump’s bid to indefinitely postpone sentencing in his hush money case, the judge says it will proceed Jan. 10.
• Jean-Marie Le Pen dies: Jean-Marie Le Pen was the founder of France’s far-right National Front. Known for fiery rhetoric against immigration and multiculturalism, Mr. Le Pen was estranged from his daughter, Marine Le Pen, who has turned his party into one of France’s most powerful political forces today.
• South Korean standoff: A South Korean court has reissued a warrant to arrest impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol. Investigators have struggled to execute a warrant for his arrest.
• Facebook fact-checking: Meta, the company that owns Facebook, is ending its fact-checking program in the United States and replacing it with a “Community Notes” system similar to that of the platform X.
• New national monuments: President Joe Biden will establish two new national monuments in California that will honor Native American tribes.

Read these news briefs.


Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ghada Abdulfattah
Niveen (left) stands with some of her family outside their tent on the coast of Deir al-Balah, central Gaza, Jan. 5, 2025. Niveen says she encourages her children to rub their feet together to stay warm.

For tens of thousands of Palestinian families forced from their homes by 15 months of war, the temporary shelters they have constructed are no match for Gaza’s winter winds and rain. Supplies are expensive. Infants are especially vulnerable.

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Sand is piled high on the beach after hurricanes Helene and Milton’s storm surge flooded Manasota Key, Dec. 8, 2024, in Englewood, Florida. Crews are working to spread the sand back onto the beach.

As a warming climate fuels more intense storms, repair and prevention bring overwhelming costs. If people are forced to move, the character of communities could change forever. 

Civil war has uprooted millions of Sudanese from their homes. The experiences of the country’s displaced university students point to the sorrow and hope of creating a new life far from home.

In the United States, restaurants are trying smaller menus, value pricing, and leaner staff to trim costs as they cope with higher prices and a new generation of diners with different tastes and spending habits than their parents.

Martin Waalboer/Repair Café International
Martine Postma (in red shirt) interacts with repairers at the Repair Café XL event at The Hague.

Today’s throwaway culture is being challenged by a growing movement to try to fix rather than replace household appliances. The effort has even led to repair-friendly laws in many countries.


The Monitor's View

REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria
A government flyer offering a reward for information leading to the capture of Edmundo González Urrutia, in Caracas, Jan. 7, 2025. The Venezuelan opposition leader, seen as the legitimate president-elect, has vowed to return to be inaugurated as president on Friday.

On Monday, leaders in Canada and the United States upheld the principle that democracy depends on the acceptance of defeat. That ideal now faces a more vigorous test in Venezuela.

Nicolás Maduro, who has ruled the South American country with an iron hand since 2013, intends to take the presidential oath Friday. He says he won the right to a third term in elections last July – and while he has refused to provide official ballot results, he has asserted that claim with brutal force.

Backed by loyal judges and generals, the regime - by its own count - imprisoned some 2,000 Venezuelans in the first month following the vote. Many were peaceful protesters. Some are adolescents. At least two dozen people have died in violent crackdowns by security forces.

While Mr. Maduro resorts to hard tactics, his opponents – some hounded into hiding, others into exile – are marshaling the weapons of a softer power. In recent days, Edmundo González Urrutia, seen internationally as the legitimate president-elect, has been traveling across the region, meeting leaders from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Washington.

More significant was his appeal Sunday to the one institution he sees as vital to restoring democracy to Venezuela. “Our national armed force is called upon to be a guarantee of sovereignty and respect to the people’s will,” he said in a message to the armed forces posted on Facebook.

Rather than vilify the military, however, he sought – as its prospective commander in chief – to coax its higher principles through common purpose. “It is our duty to act with honor, merit and conscience, guided by the values that unite us as a fundamental institution of the Republic,” he said.

That message underscores that democracy finds its strength in respecting opponents and exercising power with restraint. “A democracy stays alive only by grace of democratic ways of doing things,” noted Mark Bovens, emeritus professor of public administration at the Utrecht University School of Governance in the Netherlands, in a talk last year. “Many of these ways of doing things are not formally defined anywhere.”

Forced to take refuge in Spain in September, Mr. González vows to return home in time be sworn in Friday – even if he has to stage his own parallel inauguration ceremony and in spite of a bounty Mr. Maduro has tied to his immediate arrest. Together with María Corina Machado, a hugely popular opposition leader banned from running in the July election, Mr. González has called on Venezuelans to fill the streets in peaceful protest.

Mr. Maduro has the security forces on standby. “All the regime has left is fear,” Ms. Machado told Agence France-Presse, adding, “In the end, the only way to be free is to overcome fear.”

This editorial has been updated to include official post-election incarceration numbers.


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.

Recognizing that we all have a permanent, love-filled dwelling place in God brings us peace and security – even when our circumstances seem unstable.


Viewfinder

Andy Wong/AP
Yu Xiaofeng leaps into an 8 degree Fahrenheit pool carved from ice on the Songhua River, in Harbin, China, Jan. 7, 2025. Ms. Yu says winter swimming in Harbin, known as the city of ice and located close to the Russian border, dates to the 1970s. That's when residents saw Russian Orthodox faithful being baptized in the river. A winter swimming association was established in 1983.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow, when Sarah Matusek explains what a “sanctuary jurisdiction” is and how that status is likely to come into play during the incoming Trump administration.

More issues

2025
January
07
Tuesday

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