2025
January
09
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 09, 2025
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Clayton Collins
Director of Editorial Innovation

For us here in Boston, it’s a story from a day-ahead time zone, and it’s one that won’t stand still. South Korea has merited a news brief in four of the past six days and in bunches before that. Inciting incident: the South Korean president’s flirtation with martial law. 

Ann Scott Tyson is jumping in when deeper takes are needed: from Tokyo and Seoul on the regional stakes, and before that with a standback explainer, and then again from Seoul on the long arc of the political crisis.

Today, Ann reinterviews people she’d met on Seoul’s streets before. It’s a perspective on a societal shift, straight from the people living it


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News briefs

• New president for Lebanon: The country’s parliament elects U.S.-backed army chief Joseph Aoun as head of state, revealing shifts in the power balance in Lebanon and the wider Middle East. He fills a two-year presidential vacancy.
• Laken Riley Act: The U.S. Senate is expected to advance a bill requiring the federal government to detain migrants living in the United States illegally who are accused of crimes, even if they are not charged with any. 
• Tibet quake: Authorities move more than 47,000 people to shelters in the wake of Tuesday’s 6.8 magnitude earthquake in rural Tibet, Chinese officials say. 
• Rising toll in Gaza: Gaza’s Health Ministry says the death toll from the Israel-Hamas war has climbed above 46,000. The ministry has said women and children make up more than half the fatalities. 
• Musk hosts German far-right leader: Elon Musk is joined by the leader of the Alternative for Germany party on the social platform X, stoking concerns about possible meddling by the billionaire in the campaign for Germany’s Feb. 23 election.

Read these news briefs. 


Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Does freedom of speech cover entire media platforms? Critics of a U.S. law that could ban TikTok argue that it ignores a key tenet of the country’s free speech tradition: trust in the American people.

Reporters often cover difficult news. And in some cases, it’s about people who have had to flee their homes. For our reporter near Los Angeles, the current wildfire story got even more personal.

Matias Delacroix/AP
Opponents of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro protest the day before his inauguration for an internationally contested third term in Caracas, Venezuela, Jan. 9, 2025.

According to independent observers, Venezuelans elected Edmundo González president last summer, despite incumbent Nicolás Maduro’s claims of victory. Questions are swirling over who will take the oath of office Jan. 10.

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Donald Trump has not yet taken office, but the world is treating him as if he is already in power. Foreign leaders wary of the direction Mr. Trump will take are making nice, but at the same time buckling up.

Tyrone Siu/Reuters
Police attempt to stop protesters during a demonstration against impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol, near his official residence in Seoul, South Korea, Jan. 5, 2025.

More than a month after President Yoon Suk Yeol’s botched martial law attempt infuriated a nation, South Koreans are still in the street, demanding he step down. The Monitor caught up with some people we spoke with in December about their views on the evolving political crisis.

In Pictures

Avedis Hadjian
A HOLLOWED TRADITION: Mr. Ruukel works on his latest canoe outside his barn in Tohera.

Estonia’s traditional dugout canoe was a necessary means of transportation in the past. Now it has become an endangered identity marker for the country.


The Monitor's View

REUTERS/ Karamallah Daher
A young girl in the town of Klayaa in southern Lebanon joins a street celebration after Gen. Joseph Aoun, chief of the armed forces, was elected as her country's first president in more than two years, on Jan. 9, 2025.

After 12 previous failed attempts over the past two years, the fractious parties of Lebanon’s parliament overcame their differences earlier Thursday and elected Gen. Joseph Aoun, head of the Lebanese armed forces, as their country’s new president.

That rare expression of political unity creates an opportunity for the country to emerge from a deep economic and political crisis resulting from years of violence, corruption, and religious division. General Aoun won the support of 99 of 128 members of parliament. He struck an immediate chord of harmony afterward, declaring that his election meant that no one had been “defeated.”

The break in Lebanon’s power vacuum follows the collapse last month of the Assad regime in neighboring Syria and the weakening of Hezbollah, Iran’s main militant proxy in Lebanon, through war with Israel. Backed by the United States, France, and Saudi Arabia, Mr. Aoun faces an immediate task in fulfilling the terms of a ceasefire brokered between Israel and Hezbollah in November. That agreement, which is set to expire later this month, requires establishing the military’s control across southern Lebanon, the militant group’s stronghold.

Addressing parliament, Mr. Aoun pledged to “confirm the state’s right to monopolize the carrying of weapons” by strengthening the army’s capability to protect the country’s borders. That marks a significant turn. Mr. Aoun kept the armed forces on the sidelines for most of the 13-month war between Israel and Hezbollah.

The vote in parliament demonstrated the extent to which the militant group has been discredited since Israel eliminated its top leaders. Blocs that in recent years have shied from open confrontation with Hezbollah openly rebuffed its representatives both within the chamber and on social media. Even its favored candidate threw his support behind Mr. Aoun.

In a country whose currency has lost 98% of its value since 2019 and where 80% of the population lives below the poverty line, Mr. Aoun quickly acknowledged that Lebanon’s security requires more than military solutions. “There must be equality among all citizens,” he told parliament. “There must be equality before the law.... Justice is the only protection for all citizens.”

In vowing to prioritize public education, environmental protection, and electoral reform, the new president may have been nodding to the aspirations that shaped the 2019 “October Revolution” – a spontaneous uprising of youth demanding democratic reforms. The open celebrations across Lebanon following Mr. Aoun’s elections, even in Hezbollah's southern stronghold, showed that those hopes endure.

“The social justice agenda cannot be advanced without first breaking away from the current sectarian state and moving toward a civil state,” wrote Ghia Osseiran, a fellow researcher at the Centre for Lebanese Studies, of the youth protests.

For the first time in decades, wrote Lebanese journalist Kim Ghattas in the Financial Times, there is “a unique opportunity to reimagine Lebanon’s future without the threat of violence.”


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.

We can all know the Comforter that Jesus promised would be with us forever, which brings healing and connectedness.


Viewfinder

Jacquelyn Martin/AP
U.S. leaders of past, present, and future (first row, from left) President Joe Biden, first lady Jill Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and second gentleman Doug Emhoff, and (second row, from left) former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former President George W. Bush, Laura Bush, former President Barack Obama, President-elect Donald Trump, and Melania Trump stand during the state funeral for former President Jimmy Carter at Washington National Cathedral Jan. 9, 2025.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for spending some of your Thursday with the Monitor. Stop back tomorrow. We’ll tell you what to know about Greenland as the U.S. president-elect makes expansionist statements about that Arctic island, which is more than three times the size of Texas. And we’ll serve up our January picks for books of the month. 

More issues

2025
January
09
Thursday

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