2017
June
01
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 01, 2017
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

President Trump made a very strong statement today, and it had nothing to do with climate change. Yes, Mr. Trump pulled the United States out of the Paris Agreement on climate change, which will have an effect on climate action worldwide. But he also removed America from an agreement that every country in the world except two has joined. It was one of the most dramatic examples yet of his approach to “America first.”

America has long seen itself as singular, opting out of widely backed global efforts such as an anti-land mine treaty and participation in the International Criminal Court. America’s status as the world’s lone superpower creates unique demands, the thinking goes. But as the world becomes more interconnected, there is increasing momentum to find common purpose in countless ways, from trade to space science.

In opting out of an accord that literally united the globe, Trump made it clear that he is determined to deliver on what his voters wanted: a willingness to buck the rest of the world, even if that means walking alone. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Issa Al Awamleh/WFP
Jordanian and Syrian trainees share ideas for new business ventures in the classroom of a WFP-sponsored program in Amman, Jordan, that promotes entrepreneurship, in April, 2017.
Neil Blake/The Grand Rapids Press/AP
Protesters in Big Rapids, Mich., chanted a reminder of the Flint, Mich., water-contamination issue during a public hearing on Nestlé Waters North America’s proposal to boost the volume of groundwater it pumps in the region for bottling. State regulators are reviewing the request.
Lefteris Pitarakis/AP
British entrepreneur Richard Branson posed at a major British airshow in 2012 with a replica of the Virgin Galactic. He had at one point projected that his company – founded in 2004 – would serve as the world’s first commercial space line by 2009. Development has been ongoing, but the project has faced a series of delays.

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Reuters
Members of the Iraqi security forces play soccer in Tikrit in April, 2015, after recapturing the city.

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A message of love

J. Scott Applewhite/AP
The justices of the US Supreme Court gathered today in Washington for an official group portrait to include Neil Gorsuch. Seated (from l.): Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Anthony Kennedy, John Roberts (chief justice), Clarence Thomas, and Stephen Breyer. Standing (from l.): Elena Kagan, Samuel Alito Jr., Sonia Sotomayor, and Neil Gorsuch. The shot has been long-awaited by photo editors. 'We know that the whole court will not sit for an official portrait until a new justice is appointed,' says the Monitor’s photo director, Alfredo Sosa. 'And we have been looking at images from the same portrait session for seven years,' since Justice Kagan was confirmed.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

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2017
June
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