2020
November
02
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 02, 2020
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Amelia Newcomb
Senior editor

At long last, it’s here: the week Americans finish casting their votes and then wait – with the world – to learn who will inhabit the Oval Office in January. 

Emotions are swirling. Plywood is going up on storefronts. The New York Times remarked on “an urgency never seen before.” Axios news advised that we all “do our part to minimize the drama.” Historian Simon Schama explained what the riotous year 1965 could teach us, and why he “succumbs to optimism.”

For Monitor journalists, it’s been a long stretch of shoe-leather reporting and navigating a breathtaking array of perspectives. And also of recording those lighter moments that happily punctuate the seriousness.

Peter Grier, who’s covered politics for decades, says he realized things were truly different this year when, in Maine, he saw a boat parade – on land. A large pickup was towing a commercial lobster boat flying a very large Trump flag.

Linda Feldmann, another campaign veteran, enjoyed learning a little about Colombian folk music during a Miami car caravan for Joe Biden. Noah Robertson, new to the political game, recalls taking notes on his phone at a press conference when a text popped onto his screen. “I think I’m watching the back of your head on TV,” his proud mother shared. 

For Story Hinckley, grocery store parking lots – urban and rural, fancy and modest – tell an important story. The many voters she's buttonholed in them may differ on policies, she notes. But in the end there’s one thing they have in common: “They want good jobs, to feel safe, a promising future for their children.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Democracy under strain

Graphic

Understanding polarization

SOURCE:

Pew Research Center, Voteview.com, Common Ground Committee

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff
Taylor Luck
A passerby glances at election posters dotting the Third Circle roundabout in Amman, Jordan, on Oct. 28, 2020. The pandemic has leveled the playing field for parliamentary elections Nov. 10, allowing many more women to run.
Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call/AP
Bob Good, Republican candidate for Virginia's 5th Congressional District, speaks during a rally at the Bedford County Courthouse in Bedford, Virginia, on Sept. 8, 2020.
Tendai Marima
Aleeya Simbi (center), who was born on the day Robert Mugabe stepped down from power, sits with her mother, Progress Garakara, and her father, Alfred Simbi, in their kitchen in Mbare, a suburb in Harare, Zimbabwe.

Difference-maker

Courtesy of Xusana Davis
Xusana Davis, Vermont's first executive director of racial equity, works to root out systemic racism in one of America's whitest states.

The Monitor's View

AP
German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks after a European Union summit Oct. 15 that focused on topics ranging from climate to Africa.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Emrah Gurel/AP
A member of rescue services takes a break in the debris of a collapsed building in Izmir, Turkey, Nov. 2, 2020. Rescue teams continue ploughing through concrete blocs and debris in search of survivors of a powerful earthquake that struck Turkey's Aegean coast and north of the Greek island of Samos, Oct. 30.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for starting your week with us. Tomorrow, you can meet the two Janets – a story, written by Christa Case Bryant, of college friends whose politics diverged widely over the decades. Yet their bonds are as strong as ever, even though they often vehemently disagree. I hope you’ll check it out.

More issues

2020
November
02
Monday
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