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Daily News Briefing

The Daily News Briefing is no longer being produced, and new Briefings will no longer be added as part of JSH-Online.

Although the Monitor's new premium news product, the Monitor Daily, is not included as part of a JSH-Online subscription, JSH-Online subscribers receive email and web access to the Monitor Daily through May 19 at no additional charge and are also eligible to subscribe to the Monitor Daily at a discounted rate.

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The Christian Science Monitor Daily News Briefing provides an editorially curated perspective on important news of the day. Each issue provides a daily commentary from the editors, abridged versions of five key stories, an Editorial, the Christian Science perspective article, and a Top Headlines column. Insights gained from the Monitor can support and strengthen your prayers for the world. For the latest news and 24/7 access to Monitor content, you can also visit CSMonitor.com.

Mend, don't end, the EU

For all its downsides, the EU has created the world's largest economy. More importantly, it has established a Pax Europa.

Adieu primaries

With Clinton and Trump increasingly likely to be their parties' nominees, US politics is shifting toward the general election.

Politics first

Saudi Arabia keeps pumping as rival Iran returns to oil markets.

News and trust

Americans' confidence in the news media has never been lower. Strong news reporting has never been more necessary.

The Saudi question

Congress is increasingly concerned about the US relationship with Saudi Arabia. Since 9/11, America has begun to see the Saudis in a different light.

Like Ebola, Zika is a global public health emergency. It needs attention. It doesn't need fear.

Sea change in Asia

China's staking of maritime claims in nearby waters is reshaping its neighbors' military alliances.

Pricing Brexit

The IMF warns that the global economy is at risk should Britain vote to leave the EU.

In Syria, Libya, and Yemen, peace efforts could easily fall apart. Millions of suffering civilians are why they should not.

Every election is a new test in the messy, remarkable laboratory of American democracy. This fall is an important one in ways far beyond who wins.