海角大神

2026
January
20
Tuesday
Kurt Shillinger
Managing Editor

Back to work....聽In Europe, the pressing question over the weekend was how to respond to Donald Trump鈥檚 ambitions聽to acquire聽Greenland.聽The American president says the territory is essential to U.S. and global security, and has criticized Denmark for not securing it adequately.聽Denmark sent more troops to the Arctic Island yesterday after the American president refused to rule out taking it by force. Meanwhile, European leaders huddled in response to Mr. Trump鈥檚 threat to increase tariffs in order to聽force a sale of聽the autonomous territory. The issue has already overshadowed this week's annual gathering in Davos.聽

These tensions among allies come as Mr. Trump finishes his first year back in office today. We start by reviewing a consequential presidency at home and abroad. Also, our chief diplomatic writer, Howard LaFranchi, reports on claims of Russian human rights violations through the accounts of Ukrainians.


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News briefs

Syrian government forces swept through Kurdish-held eastern Syria today, threatening the country鈥檚 stability and pitting two Washington allies against each other. The fighting violates a U.S.-brokered ceasefire struck Sunday, under which Kurdish factions vowed to integrate into the Syrian state. Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa issued a decree on Saturday recognizing Kurdish as a national language and restoring citizenship to Syrian Kurds. Around 10,000 ISIS fighters are held in Kurdish prisons.

The shooting of an Indiana judge and his wife in their home prompted renewed concern about public servants鈥 safety. Judge Steven P. Meyer, who has presided over high-profile cases, and his wife, Kimberly Meyer, are both in stable condition. Police are investigating the case. 鈥淎s you work to peacefully resolve more than 1 million cases a year, you must not only feel safe, you must also be safe,鈥 Loretta H. Rush, chief justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, said in a statement, calling the violence 鈥渃ompletely unacceptable.鈥

Russia stepped up its campaign on Ukraine鈥檚 energy sector, striking Kyiv early this morning. The missile and drone attack left more than 5,600 high-rise buildings without heat, according to the city mayor. Nearly 80% of those buildings had only recently had heat restored after damage from a Jan. 9 strike. Overnight drone attacks across Ukraine meant households in five regions woke up without power in freezing temperatures.

Canada signed a trade deal with China amid tensions with the United States. Canada is set to slash tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, and China will reduce tariffs on Canadian canola seed and other products. Mark Carney, the first Canadian prime minister to visit China in nine years, said Ottawa鈥檚 relationship with Beijing has become 鈥渕ore predictable鈥 than its relationship with Washington.

China鈥檚 campaign to encourage women to have more children has so far failed to arrest the sharply declining population. China鈥檚 population fell by 3.4 million at the end of 2025 to 1.4 billion, the National Bureau of Statistics reported Monday. Birthrates are declining around the world, with China鈥檚 reportedly the lowest since 1945. Beijing removed the one-child policy in 2016 and has since tried cash subsidies and other incentives for couples.

Morocco, the first African team to compete in a World Cup semifinal, says it will pursue legal action over its 1-0 loss to Senegal in Sunday鈥檚 men鈥檚 Africa Cup of Nations final. The team said morale dropped when Senegal鈥檚 players left the field for several minutes to protest a penalty kick. Morocco ultimately missed the shot. In recent decades, governments of both countries have tried to use soccer to shape national identity and international standing.

鈥 From Monitor writers around the globe


Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Evan Vucci/AP/File
Donald Trump has taken the president鈥檚 power of executive action to extraordinary levels 鈥 including (above) by signing a record 26 executive orders on his first day back in office.

Beyond policy specifics, Donald Trump has in many ways raised the bar for how much power a president can wield unilaterally. Controversy has followed, regarding both the policies and the approach to power.

Efrem Lukatsky/AP/File
Ukraine is compiling a list of war crimes and human rights abuses that both military members and civilians say they've suffered at the hands of Russia. Here, a soldier returning from Russian captivity hugs his wife during a POW exchange between Russia and Ukraine in October 2025.

Ukraine is investigating hundreds of thousands of cases of Russian war crimes and crimes against humanity 鈥 despite a backdrop of growing impunity in the international arena.


The Monitor's View

Reuters
President Donald Trump speaks to U.S. Justice Department workers on March 14, 2025.

Over the course of the first year of his second term in the White House, Donald Trump鈥檚 attempts to assert presidential authority over the whole executive branch might well be his defining legacy. If his actions prevail, they would bring a massive reshaping of America鈥檚 democratic republic.

He has fired officials from agencies or government positions long presumed to be independent in decision-making. And because Mr. Trump鈥檚 actions have brought lawsuits, a conservative-leaning Supreme Court seems poised to rule soon that the separation of powers between the three branches of government does allow such a 鈥渦nitary鈥 鈥 or powerful 鈥 executive.聽

To many Americans who voted for Mr. Trump, he is merely making good on his electoral legitimacy to fulfill campaign promises. He is altering the policies of the administrative state through the removal of 鈥渦naccountable鈥 government workers deemed to be opposed to the chief executive鈥檚 vision. A few previous presidents, from Andrew Jackson to Franklin Roosevelt to Richard Nixon, have assumed similar authority.

Such a maximal use of the presidency is seen by Trump backers as a type of accountability to a democracy鈥檚 ultimate sovereignty: the will of the people as expressed through elections. The Constitution states the United States president is solely charged to 鈥渢ake Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.鈥

鈥淎 feeble Executive implies a feeble execution of the government,鈥 wrote Alexander Hamilton.

To the opponents of a unitary executive, however, both Congress and the courts have put necessary checks on a president鈥檚 ability to fire career civil servants or meddle in regulatory agencies set up by Congress to tap professional expertise in solving today鈥檚 complex, long-term problems.

Agencies also have their own internal accountability, such as obedience to law. They must listen to public input and not necessarily a president who is self-serving, acts by whim, or will be out of office soon. They must provide reasoned justifications for their decisions.

There is also a third way, one that is now being practiced in some state governments that have leaned toward allowing stronger governors to shape agency behavior while improving the lines of accountability.

According to a report last year by the Manhattan Institute, about 20 states have made reforms since the 1990s that have decentralized hiring capabilities and the resolution of grievances to agency managers, allowed variation in pay-based on performance, and made many or almost all state workers to be employed at-will.

鈥淢ost observers and researchers agree that state reforms鈥 effects have been either positive or, at worst, neutral,鈥 says the report, Radical Civil Service Reform Is Not Radical. 鈥淭here have been general reports of improved performance with little evidence of politicization.鈥

In Indiana, for example, reforms led to fewer complaints by state employees and 鈥淸a]gency performance [was] up in almost every category, including customer service and teamwork.鈥

Rather than being punished or removed, civil servants in any government can be given incentives to change and allowed to face mistakes honestly and learn from failures. Through deliberation and consensus, elected leaders can help career officials through regeneration, not retribution.

Fear can be a hindrance to the listening and learning needed to align government in harmonious action. At its best, political accountability relies on humility and patience more than assertions of moral superiority. Many states are adopting such approaches.

鈥淕ubernatorial administration emerges as a promising vehicle for efficacious governing and a new source of state resilience,鈥 wrote Miriam Seifter, a law professor at University of Wisconsin, in a 2017 Harvard Law Review article.

States have long been laboratories for new ideas in governance. Yet, 鈥渄espite the decades of evidence, states鈥 reforms have had remarkably little impact on the conversation about the federal civil service,鈥 said the Manhattan Institute report. 鈥淭he federal government can and should learn from them.鈥


A 海角大神 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 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 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 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

When we open our hearts to the good that God is and continually does, we experience divine goodness more tangibly.


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Heng Sinith/AP
A boy flies a kite as his father walks home after fishing on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Jan 15, 2026.

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