2023
September
15
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 15, 2023
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Linda Feldmann
Washington Bureau Chief

As a longtime political reporter, I have two strong memories of personal interaction with Mitt Romney: The first was at an off-the-record barbecue he, his family, and his staff held for about 30 journalists in 2007 at his lake home in New Hampshire. 

Mr. Romney, fresh off a term as governor of Massachusetts, was a top contender for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination. The gathering was a chance to see the Romneys in action – including a Kennedy-esque scene of his sons playing touch football, his grandchildren frolicking, and Mr. Romney himself, along with his wife, Ann, graciously chatting with the reporters covering them. We paid for our own meals. 

A month later, I interviewed Mr. Romney in Ottumwa, Iowa, about his deep faith as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. My profile of Mr. Romney delved into the paradox of a man who lived an upright life but had to play down his faith, given some Americans’ discomfort with church teachings. 

I was struck by his at-times awkward style, which I suspected could make it hard to connect with voters. I also imagined a man who might approach the presidency the way he did his time as a local church bishop: “a very weighty responsibility, which you take with a great deal of care and sobriety,” he said.

Now-Senator Romney from Utah has begun his farewell to elective office, after announcing Wednesday that he would not run again. Time for younger leadership, he said.

Mr. Romney’s decision also reflects the deep divisions within the GOP, as explained in today’s lead article. He was the only Republican senator who voted to convict then-President Donald Trump in 2020, after Mr. Trump’s first impeachment. 

But on Wednesday, Mr. Romney suggested he’s not leaving public discourse altogether: “I’m not retiring from the fight.” 


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Today's stories

And why we wrote them

Yes, Donald Trump is leading by far in polls of GOP voters. But the Republican Party is far from homogeneous, as a disparate field of presidential candidates attests.

A newly announced economic corridor stretching from India to Europe could help accelerate economic development, as well as counter China’s growing international influence. 

Taylor Luck
A woman walks away with a bag of baguettes as other customers queue up at a bakery in Bab Souika, Tunis, Tunisia, Aug. 22, 2023.

A constellation of economic crises has left Tunisians scrambling to find bread. With the government unable to pay for imported wheat, economists say the populist president needs to find the courage to enact reforms.

Charles Krupa/AP/File
A small tractor clears water from a business as floodwaters block a street in Barre, Vermont, July 12, 2023. Across the state, 3 to 9 inches of rain fell in a 48-hour period. Scientists say such heavy storms are increasing worldwide, due to warming ocean temperatures that put more moisture in the air.

Extreme weather events have been persistent and global. The result can be a perspective shift, even in areas of relative shelter from the effects of climate change.

Podcast

Reporting a soccer story that became something more

Our writer dropped into northern Wales in May for a match featuring a small-fry team depicted in “Welcome to Wrexham” on FX. What he got was a high-drama Hollywood ending, one that hasn’t been an ending at all. 

A Writer’s Wrexham Moment

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Film

Kimberley French/©Sky UK Ltd
In “Lee,” photojournalists Lee Miller (Kate Winslet) and David Scherman (Andy Samberg) document World War II events.

When a critic returns to a major film festival after a pandemic break, what will he find? Peter Rainer navigates Toronto – and an industry still dealing with dual strikes – and is rewarded with a top-notch cinematic passport.


The Monitor's View

Every few months, a new survey offers another snapshot of the state of Christianity in the United States. Taken separately, the surveys invite different conclusions. Yet together, they point to a stirring of spiritual thought – particularly in regard to the role of church in racial reconciliation.

Indeed, even as millions of Americans have stopped going to church over the past 25 years, churches have become more multiracial during the same period. Earnest wrestling to uproot legacies of racial division coincides with a broadly shared hunger among churchgoers for unity and inclusivity. A Lifeway Research poll earlier this year found that large majorities of American Christians, across denominations, want their churches to do more to promote ethnic diversity.

That may reflect the unique capacity of religious institutions to emphasize shared values, notes Daniel Williams, author of a 2021 book on Christianity and politics in America. “Being part of a religious community often forces people to get along with others – including others with different political views,” he wrote in The Atlantic earlier this month.

Several signs point to the churn taking place within American Christianity over race. The Southern Baptist Convention this week elected a Black pastor to lead its ethics and religious advocacy for the first time. In June, the archbishop of Philadelphia, Nelson Pérez, issued a pastoral letter calling on Catholics to salve racism with love. “That means that whatever wounds one, even if unintentional, is everyone’s responsibility to heal,” he wrote.

Much of the work taking place is happening without much notice. “From theology, small group bible studies, fellowship activities, honoring and recognizing different cultural heritage months, learning about each other, sparking dialogue,” Yolanda Johnson, a diversity trainer who works with churches, told Colorado Public Radio in August. “I’ve seen leadership evolve and change and become more diverse. I’ve seen people change.”

In the three years since the summer of protests for racial justice, a growing number of church leaders have tried to break away from harmful racial legacies. “If we are truly allowing Jesus to shape us, and we’re truly growing in grace, we’re going to desire the best for our brothers and sisters,” the Rev. Derwin Gray, pastor of Transformation Church near Charlotte, North Carolina, told The Washington Post. “We’re not going to deny the impact of the past. We’re not going to live in the past. We’re going to join hands together to move forward to a better future.”

That unity – and Christianity’s enduring relevance – says Kris Dillard, pastor of Marked Church in Fayetteville, North Carolina, is grounded in more than human resolve. “The truth of God’s word always trumps race and culture,” he said in a sermon last weekend.


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.

Each of us has a God-given ability to know and feel our innate worth as one of God’s loved children – which frees us from negative traits that hamper productive lives and relationships.


Viewfinder

Kristopher Radder/The Brattleboro Reformer/AP
Members of the Raskin family make candy apples in preparation for Rosh Hashana, Sept. 13, 2023, in Brattleboro, Vermont. Sweetened apples symbolize the desire for a sweet year. The Jewish new year begins at sundown on Friday, Sept. 15, and ends after nightfall on Sunday, Sept. 17.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris and Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

You’ve come to the end of today’s Daily. We hope you have a great weekend and come back on Monday for our look at U.S. President Joe Biden at the United Nations. Mr. Biden is one of the last of a generation of internationalist U.S. leaders, and with authoritarianism and isolationism on the rise, he has struggled to make headway. The U.N. General Assembly will be a chance to try to reestablish his vision.

More issues

2023
September
15
Friday

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