2019
February
15
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

February 15, 2019
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

By declaring a national emergency to build his border wall, President Trump may have just made it easier for future US presidents to take the easy way out.

Being president can be hard; it’s designed to be. Negotiating with Congress over your priorities can be lengthy, contentious, and center on minute details. Given the network of competing powers established by the United States Constitution, you’re almost guaranteed to fall short of your goals.

Just signing a declaration would be so much less trouble – and more effective, in terms of enacting your plans.

Mr. Trump’s emergency declaration is his way of trying to bypass a frustrating situation, in which he has gotten much less than he wanted for his border wall, and do what he wants.

Is it a true emergency? He said on Friday the US is facing an “invasion” of criminals and drugs. But border crossings are at record lows, according to government figures. Democrats say the emergency is political, not real.

And a Trump expansion of the meaning of “emergency” could provide future presidents a shiny new tool. Climate change? That’s a big issue. Solutions might be difficult, expensive, and really hard to hammer out with lawmakers. Declaring an emergency and acting unilaterally? That would be tempting – and a whole lot easier.

Federal courts will certainly rule on Trump’s decision. But the law gives chief executives a huge amount of leeway to make national security decisions.

If Trump prevails, it will be a major, maybe unprecedented, expansion of American presidential power.

Now to our five stories for today, which range from difficult negotiations of a different sort in Afghanistan to ice skating on Ottawa’s Rideau Canal.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Pavel Golovkin/AP
Taliban Mullah Abbas Stanikzai (c.) attends ‘intra-Afghan’ talks in Moscow. On Feb. 12, 2019, the Taliban announced a 14-member negotiating team, led by Mr. Stanikzai, ahead of talks with US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, who has been meeting with the insurgents to try to end the US’s longest war.

Nearly 2 billion people depend on Himalayan glaciers. What if they melt?

SOURCE:

World Bank, ESA, NASA, Kraaijenbrink, P. D. A. et al. (2017). Impact of a global temperature rise of 1.5° Celsius on Asia’s glaciers

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Courtesy of Ottawa Tourism
Ottawa’s Rideau Canal Skateway, the largest natural rink in the world, is the heart of Winterlude, now in its 41st year. It’s a festival of ice slides, sledding, ice sculpture competitions, snowboard lessons, and iceboat racing down the canal.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
Combined pictures show President Muhammadu Buhari and main opposition candidate Atiku Abubakar addressing campaign rallies ahead of the Feb. 16 presidential election.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Andy Nelson/The Christian Science Monitor
An uncertain journey awaits an ethnic Albanian Kosovar refugee after she arrives in Morinë, Albania, from Yugoslavia in 1999. In a quest to document the human narrative, Monitor photographers have witnessed a vast spectrum of events, some large in historical scope, others seemingly mundane. The Time Capsule project allows us to dust off some of those smaller moments, which provide telling views into the past. In this installment we offer you buses.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. On Monday, for the holiday formally known as George Washington’s Birthday, in a video Monitor film critic Peter Rainer shares his thoughts on the best presidential movies. They’re sometimes inaccurate or irreverent, he says, but they can be “an invaluable indicator of our national aspirations.”

More issues

2019
February
15
Friday
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