2022
June
24
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

June 24, 2022
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Bloodhounds are models of perseverance. Once they begin tracking a scent, other odors don’t distract them. They’ve been known to follow a trail for 130 miles.

So perhaps it’s fitting that it took them over 140 years to win the canine Super Bowl, the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show. Trumpet, a big and noble bloodhound so wrinkled that his jowls have jowls of their own, took best in show at Westminster on Wednesday night. 

He triumphed over Winston, a smiley French bulldog, and crowd favorite Striker, an immaculate and personable Samoyed, among others.

His handler and co-owner Heather Helmer said she was “shocked” at Trumpet’s win.

“I feel like sometimes a bloodhound might be a little bit of an underdog,” she said.

Bloodhounds have been at the Westminster Kennel Club since 1878. They’ve won the hound group of the club’s show 22 times since 1941. But they’ve never walked away with top honors before.

If “best nose” were a category, they’d have an unbroken winning streak. They can distinguish smells at least a thousand times better than humans, and far better than other dogs, even scent hounds like beagles. 

Owners say they are sweet and loving companions. But the nose rules their life. They can’t be walked off leash. If a rabbit stirs a county over, they might be off. 

They’re big. They need exercise. There is drool.

Underneath all that loose skin, though, there is charm. Take Trumpet. Outside the ring “he has a lot of attitude, and he’s a little crazy,” said Ms. Helmer. 

 

  


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Anti-abortion protesters celebrate following the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 ruling that affirmed a constitutional right to abortion, outside the Supreme Court in Washington on June 24, 2022. “On the issue of abortion, the Constitution is neither pro-life nor pro-choice,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the majority opinion.
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Protestors in support of Ukraine stand with signs and EU flags during a demonstration outside of an EU summit in Brussels, June 23, 2022. European Union leaders approved a proposal to grant EU candidate status to Ukraine on Thursday, the first step on a long road toward membership.
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Wandrea ArShaye Moss, a former Georgia election worker, is comforted by her mother, Ruby Freeman (right) during a hearing of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, in Washington, on June 21, 2022. Ms. Moss described getting death threats amid Republican efforts to call Georgia's election results into question.

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Former South African President Jacob Zuma addresses supporters in 2021 after being charged with corruption.

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Preview of Denmark's new museum FLUGT, the Danish word for escape, in Oksboel, Denmark, June, 24, 2022. The museum, which opens Saturday, will tell the stories of the largest refugee streams coming into Denmark from WWII through the current war in Ukraine.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Here’s a bonus read: The history of abortion in the United States is more complicated than many people realize. Our Harry Bruinius spoke to a legal scholar about the shifts in perception that have shaped public attitudes over time. You can read his Q&A here

Come back Monday. Taylor Luck will be reporting on Saudi Arabia’s bid to begin a transition to an economy not focused on oil, and what that transformation may mean for young Saudis. 

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