2023
October
05
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 05, 2023
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Mark Sappenfield
Senior global correspondent

Welcome to today’s Daily. We’ve got stories for you on the new U.S. Supreme Court term, which will aim to deepen the court’s conservative revolution, as well as our weekly roundup of progress around the world. (No, the Republic of Super Neighbors is not the next Marvel film.) 

Meanwhile, New Hampshire is fighting tooth and nail to keep its place on the presidential primary calendar, though many Democrats are not impressed. And Pakistan appears to finally be realizing that its long-standing support of the Taliban might not be the greatest idea. 

But Ned Temko’s Patterns column prompted me to reach out to him. Is it really as big a deal as it sounds? Yes, he says. It is. 

The subject of the column is the European Union. But it’s really much more about what Ned calls “the third seismically redefining event of modern European history.” So, a big deal. It’s about Europe’s vision for what it wants to be going forward. 

For years, admitting additional Eastern European members was not a priority. The EU had other things to deal with, most particularly the historic number of migrants arriving from Africa and the Middle East. 

But the Ukraine war has underscored the importance of rethinking Europe’s most prestigious club. Ned says it is a new inflection point in European history, following World War II and the Cold War. There’s a new desire to expand the tent of membership – to bring more countries in and trust the influence of the EU to drive change where democratic or economic progress is needed. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has a compelling argument. Central to his plea to join the EU, Ned says, has been the fact that Ukrainians “are sacrificing their livelihoods and even their lives not merely to defend their country against an invader, but in defense of a Western, democratic way of life.”


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

The Explainer

Mark Schiefelbein/AP
Visitors walk across the plaza in front of the Supreme Court on opening day of the new term, Oct. 2, 2023, in Washington.
Qazi Rauf/AP
A paramilitary soldier gestures to a loaded truck driving toward border crossing point in Torkham, Pakistan, Sept. 15, 2023. A key northwestern border crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan reopened Friday after a nine-day closure due to clashes between border forces, officials from both sides said.
Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Patterns

Tracing global connections

Points of Progress

What's going right

The Monitor's View

AP
People in the capital Addis Ababa buy chickens for the Ethiopian new year, Sept. 11.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Viewfinder

Rajanish Kakade/AP
Members of the media hold placards during a protest against the recent detention of journalists, in Mumbai, India, Oct. 5. Police in New Delhi have arrested the editor of NewsClick, a news website, and one of its administrators after raiding the homes of journalists working for the site, which has been critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Hindu nationalist-led government. In Indian-controlled Kashmir, Fahad Shah, editor of The Kashmir Walla and a Monitor contributor, has been imprisoned for more than a year and The Kashmir Walla has been shut down.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thank you for joining us today. Please come back tomorrow when we explore an issue that has gained urgency amid the current uncertainty around leadership in the U.S. House of Representatives. Support for the Ukraine war effort has lessened, even if majorities in America and Europe still favor it. What happens now?

More issues

2023
October
05
Thursday
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