Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - The O'Reilly Update, March 28, 2026
Episode Date: March 28, 2026The Weekend Edition of The O'Reilly Update! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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Bill O'Reilly.
Kelly here, you are listening to the weekend edition of the O'Reilly update.
Coming up next, the news with Mike Slater.
Thanks, Bill.
Here's what's happening this week in America.
Pay the TSA.
Begging for a deal.
Med school discrimination and signature on money that's all coming up.
Then Bill's going to be here with your message of the day.
But first, the president announced that he will sign an executive order to pay TSA workers during the partial government shutdown.
Speaking of Democrats, he wrote.
They almost destroyed our country, allowing 25 million people to enter from prisons,
mental institutions, and insane asylums, those that are drug dealers and thousands of murderers,
many of whom killed more than one person.
I'm going to sign an order instructing the Secretary of Homeland Security, Mark Wayne Mullen,
who was just confirmed the other day, to immediately pay our TSA agents in order to address
this emergency situation, and to quickly stop the Democrat chaos at the airports.
We are now on day 42 of this partial.
government shutdown. The president said he is extending the pause on strikes of Iranian energy plants
by 10 days, stating that Iran is begging to make a deal. He wrote, as per Iranian government
request, please let this statement serve to represent that I am pausing the period of energy plant
destruction by 10 days to Monday, April 6th, 2026 at 8 p.m. Eastern. He said in the Oval Office
yesterday, we estimated it would take approximately 4 to 6 weeks to achieve our mission. 26 days in,
we are extremely, really, a lot ahead of schedule.
The Iranian regime is now admitting to itself that they've been decisively defeated.
They now have a chance to make a deal, but that's up to them.
And they'll tell you, we're not negotiating.
We will not negotiate.
Of course they're negotiating.
They've been obliterated.
Who wouldn't negotiate?
The federal government has opened up investigations into how race is considered in
omissions at three medical schools, Stanford University, Ohio State, and University of
California, San Diego.
There was a 2003 Supreme Court decision forbidding affirmative action in college admissions,
and the Trump administration is demanding that these universities show proof that they are abiding by this Supreme Court decision.
The Supreme Court said that race could be considered if the student talks about how it is affected their life in a student essay, for example.
But Trump has raised concerns that colleges and universities are using these personal statements as a proxy for race,
which he said is illegal to.
discrimination. President Trump, his signature will be added to future U.S. paper currency. He will
become the first sitting president whose name will appear on paper money. Also, two coins with his
image will be on them, a dollar coin and a special 24-carat commemorative gold coin.
Calvin Coolidge was the only other sitting president to have a coin with his image on it.
I'm Mike Slater. YouTube.com slash at Politics by Faith. Bill O'Reilly has your message of the day.
Next.
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Time now for the O'Reilly Update, message of the day.
Delta Airlines has cut off all.
perks to Congresspeople flying out of Washington, D.C. The company has suspended personal security
escorts as well as preferential security screening. Good for Delta. The failure to pay
TSA personnel is a contrived gambit to force homeland security to basically stop immigration
enforcement. Senator Charles Schumer is demanding judicial warrants.
be issued before undocumented foreign nationals are detained.
Schumer well knows that's impossible.
There aren't enough judges in an entire country
to analyze millions of immigration cases.
When President Biden decided to open the southern border to migrants,
more than 10 million poured in here
during his catastrophic four-year term,
Senator Schumer had no problem with that, despite the chaos that followed.
Now, Schumer wants all but extremely dangerous migrants to stay in the country and is using TSA agents as hostages to try to achieve that.
Who gets hurt?
We do.
waiting on lines for hours. Schumer is likely to fail, but in the meantime, everybody suffers.
I'm Bill O'Reilly. I approve the message by writing it. You can reach me. Bill at Bill o'Reilly.com,
Bill at Bill O'Reilly.com. Name in town, if you wish to opine.
Go to the mail, Robert Land, Chubolo, Texas, Bill. Siddemolas will continue to lead Iran.
If that is so, then all that has happened was only delaying
the nuclear plans. Has the window for Iranian uprising closed? No, but the thinking is that if the
Iranians sign a deal pretty much surrendering to America and Israel, they will lose so much
face, okay, that the Islamists would be so angry, it'll be easier for the people to rise up
after the deal and throw them out.
Hopeful thinking, wishful thinking.
But remember, any deal is going to have American inspectors coming in
to look at the uranium situation.
So it's not going to be able to reconstitute it.
John Newport Road Island, there's a No King's protest in Middletown,
which is just north of Newport.
One of the headliners refers to President Trump as a convicted felon.
Did you please investigate the status of the NYC criminal case appeal?
It's underway.
I don't expect the conviction to be overturned.
It takes forever.
This is New York State.
It takes forever.
Rosanna Saliant.
Where does Rosanna live?
She doesn't tell me.
Now, Rosanna, I'm going to scold you.
Okay?
Got to tell me where you live.
Name and town.
Hey, Bill, what countries beside the U.S. and Russia have nuclear weapons?
Here they are.
China, UK, France, Israel, Pakistan, India.
Now, South Africa says it did away with whatever nuke it had had.
And North Korea, we just don't know about what their status is.
But the others have nukes.
moment. The New York Post has been delivering impactful headlines for over two centuries, and every
weekday morning, I'll bring them straight to you. I'm Caitlin Becker, host of the New York Postcast.
From Washington to Wall Street, if it matters to you, you'll hear it here. And it wouldn't be
the Post without the stories other outlets like to ignore. So ask your smart speaker to play the
NY Postcast. Listen and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Something you might not know. Now, the O'Reilly Up.
That's a new something you might not know.
Thirty-nine years ago, the Supreme Court issued a landmark decision in a six to three ruling.
The justices said organizations can consider race and gender when hiring new employees.
Here is the story behind affirmative action in America.
The term was first coined by President John F. Kennedy, who believe race and gender hiring
decisions were necessary to promote civil rights and reduce the lasting legacy of slavery.
The issue divided the nation.
Supporters say affirmative action is necessary to correct historical injustices.
Critics say it is a direct violation of constitutional rights for equal treatment.
In 1970A, Paul Johnson, a male worker at the Santa Clara County, California,
Transportation Agency, filed a lawsuit after he was passed over for a promotion.
Though he scored higher on the test, the position was ultimately given to a female employee.
On March 25, 1987, the Supreme Court sided with Santa Clara County and against Mr. Johnson.
The justices ruled that race and gender could be considered when hiring, firing,
promoting or demoting employees. Nearly four decades later, affirmative action is a part of
everyday life in America. Policies designed to increase under-representative communities are now required
in almost every city, corporation, and educational institution in the USA. And here's something else you
might not know. A backlash against these policies is now
growing. In
2003, the Supreme Court ruled
that race-based
admissions at
Harvard University were
a direct violation of the
Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.
Regardless,
many colleges continue to make
race a factor in their admission
process. Today,
the public remains
mostly split on the issue.
According to a poll
from Pew,
36% think affirmative action is a good thing,
29% a bad thing, 33% have no opinion at all.
Back in a moment.
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For more news and honest analysis, please go to Bill O'Reilly.com. Getting ready for a game means being
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