The Monitor has won the Dirksen Award for Distinguished Reporting of Congress based on a different view of how to be fair in political reporting.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday she would not seek reelection to leadership. In her speech, she made a striking comment about the midterms.
A conference at the Chaldean Cultural Center this weekend is more than an academic pursuit. It hints at a turning point for a resilient people.
Polls show that voters increasingly want members of Congress to be bipartisan. The Common Ground Committee has come up with a scorecard.
Technology is at the center of the cheating scandal engulfing grandmasters Hans Niemann and Magnus Carlsen. It is raising new questions of integrity.
During next week’s U.N. General Assembly, a book launch explores how we can transform our economy to care for one another and the planet.
º£½Ç´óÉñ has always done news that is solution-oriented and builds on our common humanity. Now, we’re taking the next step.
The Afghan women's national soccer team is thriving, in exile, as a special member of an Australian women's soccer league.
The all-new Space Launch System is supposed to catapult U.S. astronauts back to the moon this decade, but the launch has been beset by problems and delays.
The Afghanistan women’s soccer team was a model of women’s rights. Then Kabul fell. One woman helped them get out and find new purpose as refugees.
In his new book, Quaker thinker J. Brent Bill explores how spirituality and social change intermingle from climate change to racial justice.
A controversial study claimed Tyrannosaurus rex was three different species. This week, members of the scientific community pushed back hard.
The 75th anniversary of the partition of India sheds light on those who fled for their lives and have never been able to return home since.
Many Americans are tuning out news, saying it leaves them feeling depressed. But there is a way to do news that shows hope, agency, and dignity.
Talk about tough issues like climate change, abortion, or gun laws often turns apocalyptic. Here’s why we might want to reconsider that approach.
Reports of an assassination attempt against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh show the need to overcome hate and anger in politics.
In a play debuting this weekend, great thinkers from American history come together to show how the nation can overcome political polarization.
Is America is a political prize to be fought over? Or rather, is America an idea to be fought for? Lucy Harper asks Americans to consider the latter.