What we're watching today
Here's a glimpse at our top five stories, including editor commentary on each story, and our audio edition.
Weaker political parties along with more extreme partisanship have made for a dangerous combination – one that experts say threatens democratic norms. This is the sixth installment of our “Democracy Under Strain” series.
When New York City saw its deal for a corporate HQ collapse, some leftist politics was involved. But the bigger message may be rising scrutiny of whether tax breaks for employers make sense.
For decades, the Kremlin has been almost synonymous with Vladimir Putin. A recent article suggesting that the Putin regime could endure beyond his tenure has sparked concerns about succumbing to an ideological illusion.
“Meet people where they are.” It’s a common adage. But workers with MS Ladies take that literally. For women who aren’t comfortable visiting a clinic, or can’t, home visits offer more than birth control.
More community college students are making their way to four-year universities – and helping schools meet enrollment and diversity goals. What might that mean for college affordability?
The journalist, revolutionary, and opposition leader became prime minister last May. Now he faces his hardest task yet: governing.
Aid groups are helping young people abducted by the terror group, and their children born of sexual violence, find acceptance in communities that often shun them.
This 10-part series explores different topics in which people's perception, or what they think is true, doesn't actually line up with reality.
Global migration doesn’t start or stop at borders. We launched 'On the move' to give you the bigger picture.
After 18, teens move into a new, widely acknowledged developmental phase called 'emerging adulthood,' putting off traditional markers of the grown-up world such as marriage, children, and home ownership.
From #MeToo in China to fake news in Cameroon, these issues will ripple worldwide. A Monitor roundup.
We think it is time to rethink the news.
News is essential. It is the fuel for a thriving democracy. It takes us to places and introduces us to people we never imagined. It defends our rights and values.
Over the Monitor’s 108-year history, we’ve built a legacy of high-quality, distinctive journalism because we recognize that news is more than facts. It’s the story of how we are each trying to make our homes, communities, and nations better. What matters are the values and ideals that drive us, not just the who, what, when, and where of the news.
When we understand that, we understand the world, and one another, better.
The Monitor gives readers that deeper insight by offering this approach to readers:
We challenge conventional thinking. As forces from politics to social media try to break us into competing tribes – political, racial, or economic – together we’ll rethink the question, “Who is my neighbor?”
We listen to you. We need you to hold us accountable – to keep us honest and grounded. To inspire us with what inspires you. Together, we can build a community of people who ask more from news.
We will change how you see news. News must be accurate and trustworthy, but facts alone can miss the whole story – the story of us. We are much better than much of today’s news portrays us to be. We will have the courage to look into both the best and the worst in us – and not to blame, but to demand better.
Journalism can be a force for good – for inspiration and progress. But only if we all make it so.
Enjoy a thoughtful evening read.
Enjoy a longer, more in-depth read.