2017
June
07
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 07, 2017
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Yvonne Zipp
Features Editor

After a tumultuous month, President Trump announced his choice for FBI director Wednesday. Christopher Wray, a former federal prosecutor, is considered a solid choice to take the helm of the agency, which has been continually thrust into the spotlight.

Take Thursday, when all eyes will be on former Director James Comey, who will be testifying before the Senate Intelligence Committee. Mr. Trump abruptly fired Mr. Comey in May, later telling NBC News his decision hinged on “this Russia thing,” which he called "a made-up story."

One of the questions that senators have for Comey: Why, if he thought there was obstruction of justice, didn’t he act on it? A bipartisan group also has sent Comey questions about the reported existence of memos about conversations he had with the president. Testimonies about such memos are considered admissible in court.

Comey has indicated that he will not answer questions that might impede the investigation by former FBI Director Robert Mueller, the special counsel overseeing questions of possible ties between Russia and the Trump campaign. But the details of conversations between the former FBI director and the president may still shed valuable light on the unfolding drama. More on-the-record testimony should help provide needed clarity for an American public trying to decide for itself how much “there” is there.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Darren Staples/Reuters
A woman wore tights bearing the face of Jeremy Corbyn, leader of Britain's opposition Labour Party, at a campaign rally June 6 in Birmingham, England.
Andrea Morales/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Cleo Smith – an employee of his city’s sanitation department since 1968 – works his route in South Memphis, Tenn. During his first year, he and 1,300 other black sanitation workers walked off the job to protest for fair pay and safe working conditions. The strike drew the attention of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., whose legacy still motivates Mr. Smith today.

The Monitor's View

Women are seen inside the parliament during an attack in central Tehran, Iran, June 7.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Achmad Ibrahim/AP
Suspected militants attend a sentencing hearing today at a district court in Jakarta, Indonesia. Accused by police of plotting to fire a rocket at Singapore from a nearby island, they also faced prison time for harboring 'extremists.' Indonesia, which has more than 200 million Muslims, has been cracking down on suspected extremists out of concern that they could be drawn in by the radical ideology promoted by the Islamic State.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

In case you missed it, Taylor Luck's insightful story about how cultural biases are obscuring the security threat of women in ISIS takes on new relevance in the wake of the Iran attacks. And later this week, the Monitor's Laurent Belsie will report from Kokomo, Ind., a city that has more factory jobs per capita than any other in the US.

More issues

2017
June
07
Wednesday
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