2022
November
07
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 07, 2022
Loading the player...
Noah Robertson
National Security Writer

On Friday, after greeting military families at San Diego’s Marine Corps Air Station Miramar – the inspiration for the film “Top Gun” – President Joe Biden walked over to the White House press pool and offered a prediction: Democrats will hold their House majority and add a seat in the Senate. 

Public polling and election forecasts have signaled the opposite for weeks. Republicans are favored to retake one or both chambers – even in this closer-than-usual midterm.

After his four-day, seven-state barnstorm for Democrats, which I joined as a member of the pool, the president is sure to know why. He’s a magnet for a divided America. 

Reporters following the president often only get to see him in snapshots – when he’s exiting or boarding his vehicle or entering a building.

To a lesser extent the same is true for citizens. From New Mexico to New York, people waited beside the road for the presidential motorcade to pass. Most just held out their phones for a picture. But some had a message.

Outside an elementary school in Joliet, Illinois, on Saturday, dozens of protesters held signs decorated with anti-Biden slogans. Even after the president’s event, when the wind and rain almost blew off my lanyard as I walked back to the car, they were still standing there. 

Contrast that with a rally in Philadelphia later the same day, when a group of cheerleaders greeted the motorcade in formation on the side of the road, chanting “USA” with gold pompoms. 

The president saw it all. And at a tony fundraiser in Chicago, he acknowledged, “If we lose the House and Senate, it's going to be a horrible two years” for him and his party. 

Even still, he didn’t look worried most of the time about a likely two years of divided government. He glad-handed with Democratic politicians, went to church, and stopped before exiting Marine One one day to pick up a pen for someone. 

At a Saturday rally in Philadelphia, he seemed unusually at home. He’s a Scranton kid and, he joked, was once called the state’s “third senator.” Former President Barack Obama was in town, too, closing the night in front of a packed Temple University arena. 

“It’s good to be with family,” President Biden said. 


You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.

Today's stories

And why we wrote them

America’s perpetually underfunded election system is under strain like never before, with droves of workers having quit due to threats, and concerns about “election integrity” surging.

A deeper look

Henry Gass/The Christian Science Monitor
Tania Blackburn (right), at home with her daughter, Wehgatecee, says she was fostered in nine or 10 foster homes in 11 years as a child in Oklahoma. She says the Indian Child Welfare Act didn't, for her, fulfill its purpose of keeping Native children connected with their culture.

There’s a central question at the core of every child welfare case: What is the best interest of the child? When it comes to Native adoptions, the fate of the law that set the standard for four decades now rests with the Supreme Court.

Temilade Adelaja/Reuters
Residents wade through floodwater in Obagi community, Rivers state, Nigeria, Oct. 21, 2022. Severe flooding has affected many nations this year, as has drought, adding urgency to calls for more funding to flow to developing nations from ones with the highest emissions of heat-trapping gases.

In a year when climate change impacts are being felt worldwide, the backdrop for a global summit is rising urgency from marginalized nations demanding greater fairness and action from privileged ones.

Ueslei Marcelino/Reuters
Supporters of President Jair Bolsonaro pray during a protest against his reelection loss in Anápolis, Brazil, on Nov. 2, 2022.

International observers have called Brazil’s peaceful election a win for democracy. But protests blocking interstates and calling for military intervention underscore a lack of trust in key pillars of democracy.

Essay

Your frame of mind can determine your outlook and experience. But a new thought, expressed by another, can provide a radical shift.


The Monitor's View

Amazingly, the protests in Iran, now the longest-running against one-man rule by a cleric, have been largely leaderless. Demonstrators have united around anger (over dress codes), slogans (“Woman, Life, Freedom”), and shared agony over poverty and inflation. The leaderless quality, however, points to a largely unspoken theme: a desire for equality.

If anyone in Iran is capable of making that point, it would be the spiritual leader of Iran’s largest religious minority, Sunni Muslims, who have long suffered under a Shiite-dominated regime. On Nov. 4, the most prominent Sunni cleric, Mowlavi Abdolhamid Esmailzehi, called for an immediate referendum to “change policies based on the wishes of the people.”

It was the highest-level challenge yet to the regime – and its peculiar doctrine that the Iranian people need “guardianship” by a Shiite imam – since the protests began.

A popular figure in Iran for his decades of peaceful efforts to bring about equal rights, Mr. Abdolhamid may have been pushed to take a leadership role by what is considered the largest massacre during the current protests. On Sept. 30, as many as 90 peaceful demonstrators were killed by security forces after Sunni prayers in the city of Zahedan, home to Mr. Abdolhamid.

“You cannot push back a nation that has been protesting on the streets for the past 50 days by killing, imprisoning, and beating them,” he said.

Those who wrote the Islamic Republic’s constitution – which enshrines absolute rule for Shiite leaders and the Shiite faith – were another generation, he said. “Today, there is a new generation ...  it’s a different world.” This new world, he says, would not disrespect and humiliate women over not wearing a head scarf.

For his comments, Mr. Abdolhamid was warned by the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps not to agitate the youth or it “may cost you dearly.”

He may now make a tactical retreat into his mosque and teaching institutions. But in his leadership, he made the point to the protesters – who range from merchants to students to oil workers – that there is not a natural basis for inequality in Iran. Leaderless protests prove the point.


A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication – in its various forms – is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church – The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston – whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

Globally, politics have grown more divisive and political beliefs more entrenched. But when we let God, good – rather than frustration, willfulness, or apathy – guide our political decision-making, we’re better equipped to bear witness to God’s power to unite and heal.


A message of love

Moses Sawasawa/AP
Young women get the first steps of basic military training in Goma, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nov. 7, 2022. More than 3,000 new Congolese military recruits began training as the army responds to stepped-up attacks from M23 rebels in eastern Congo, whom the government alleges are backed by neighboring Rwanda.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for starting your week with us. Tomorrow is Election Day in the U.S., and our reporters will be at the polls in states including Arizona, Pennsylvania, and Georgia. We’ll have lots of coverage for you all week.

More issues

2022
November
07
Monday

Give us your feedback

We want to hear, did we miss an angle we should have covered? Should we come back to this topic? Or just give us a rating for this story. We want to hear from you.