2017
June
12
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 12, 2017
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Iowa had to do something. By 2018, every health-care insurer in the state was planning to leave. The Affordable Care Act was collapsing. So now Iowa has proposed changes to "Obamacare" as a fix. One insurer is already on board. As a Republican-run state, Iowa will be watched.

But there’s something deeper than red and blue at work. Along the coasts and in urban areas, Obamacare is lauded. And in those areas, it is showing signs of financial stability. But in rural areas like Iowa, it is failing.

The tendency is to see Obamacare solely through a partisan lens. But as with so much, that can obscure. What Obamacare shows is that rural and urban America – different since the days of the American Revolution – are becoming dramatically more so. The question is whether politics cements those differences into tribal divides or opens itself to solutions flexible enough to encompass all.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ted S. Warren/AP
Protesters demonstrated against President Trump’s revised travel ban May 15 outside a federal courthouse in Seattle. On Monday, a three-judge panel of the Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously turned down a request to lift an injunction blocking key parts of the revised order from going into effect.
Tasnim News Agency/Reuters
Members of the Iranian civil defense run to the site of an attack on the Iranian parliament in central Tehran, Iran, on June 7, 2017.
Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Mark Baker/AP
A female great spotted kiwi was held by a native-species keeper at the Willowbank Wildlife Reserve in Christchurch, New Zealand. People across New Zealand are embracing an environmental goal so ambitious it’s been compared to putting a man on the moon: ridding the entire nation of every last stoat, possum, and rat. The idea is to give a second chance to the unusual birds that were widespread in this South Pacific nation before humans arrived 800 years ago.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
China's President Xi Jinping arrives for a session of the National People's Congress in Beijing March 12.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Anton Vaganov/Reuters
Riot police seized a demonstrator during an anticorruption protest in St. Petersburg, Russia, today. Thousands of people came out here and in Moscow, and hundreds were held by police. Opposition leader Alexei Navalny was reportedly detained at his home ahead of the protests, which were called some of the largest since 2012.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. For tomorrow’s edition we have Peter Ford in London probing this question: What happens to Brexit after Britain’s fractious election? 

More issues

2017
June
12
Monday
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