2019
November
01
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 01, 2019
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Welcome to your Daily. Today’s offerings explore the role of identity in California politics, an effort to bring transparency to a failing school district, the religious source of one woman’s acts of charity, an homage to the real-life heroine Harriet Tubman, and the network of volunteers who help animals find refuge amid disaster.

But first, in 1998 Rep. Ron Kind of Wisconsin voted to begin a House impeachment inquiry into President Bill Clinton. Last Thursday he did it again. Congressman Kind, a Democrat, voted to begin a House impeachment inquiry looking into the actions of President Donald Trump.

There are 56 lawmakers now in the House who were in office in 1998, but Representative Kind is the only one who voted to begin both historic impeachment proceedings.

The 1998 vote was, if not fully bipartisan, somewhat mixed. Thirty-one Democrats voted to begin the Clinton inquiry. Many were from conservative southern districts. Some considered the vote more procedural than partisan. 

Today the atmosphere in Congress is much more fiercely partisan. Only two Democrats voted “no” in the President Trump impeachment inquiry vote on Thursday. Only one conservative – Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan – voted “yes.” And he’s an ex-Republican, having quit the party because he believes its continued defense of President Trump is wrong.

The 2019 vote carries symbolic weight in a way the 1998 one didn’t. Republicans won’t abandon the president, in part because they don’t want to face angry Trump voters themselves. Meanwhile, some Democrats have been talking about a Trump impeachment since 2016.

In 1998 Representative Kind voted against President Clinton’s impeachment. He says today impeachment should be a last resort. But he knows the House’s atmosphere now is fraught.

“Yeah, the political environment has changed a little bit, hasn’t it?” he told The Washington Post this week.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Reed Saxon/AP/File
A street vendor greets an acquaintance in front of the Maravilla Meat Market in East Los Angeles. The left side of the mural depicts Latino union leader Cesar Chavez.

The Ten

How people use the Commandments in daily life
Sabina Louise Pierce/Special to The Christian Science Monitor
Debbie Hadden displays a meaningful object at her home in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, on Oct. 31, 2019.

Film

Glen Wilson/Focus Features/AP
Cynthia Erivo stars as Harriet Tubman in “Harriet.” The biopic about the abolitionist arrives in theaters at a time when the United States is examining the lasting effects of slavery 400 years after it first took hold on its shores.

The Monitor's View

Dita Alangkara/AP/File
Girls sit on a motorcycle in a flooded neighborhood of Jakarta, Indonesia, in 2017.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Ann Hermes/Staff

Life in a wildfire zone

LISTEN to her story

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( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back Monday. We’ll have special impeachment coverage – a Washington bureau chat meant to compare and contrast our views of today’s historic events.

Before you go, we’d love to hear your thoughts on an experiment we’ve been running with our Viewfinder this past week. Let us know what you think about the presentation of audio stories and portraits of people affected by the California wildfires from Monitor photographer Ann Hermes.

More issues

2019
November
01
Friday
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