Reuters World News - UPDATE - Trump orders TSA agents paid after House rejects deal
Episode Date: March 27, 2026*This podcast has been updated for the latest news on President Donald Trump ordering the Department of Homeland Security to pay TSA workers. U.S. President Donald Trump extends a pause on attacks ...on Iranian energy sites into April. A U.S. judge hands Anthropic a win in its fight with the Pentagon over military use of its AI. And the Olympics announces new rules barring transgender athletes from women’s events. Listen to the Morning Bid podcast here. Sign up for the Reuters Econ World newsletter here. Listen to the Reuters Econ World podcast here. Visit the Thomson Reuters Privacy Statement for information on our privacy and data protection practices. You may also visit megaphone.fm/adchoices to opt out of targeted advertising. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, I'm Kim Vinal in Wanganui, New Zealand.
And I'm Sharon Raj Carson in New Jersey today.
Trump orders the TSA to pay workers as the House rejects a deal to restore airport security funding.
Trump extends a pause on Iran energy attacks into April, while also threatening more violence.
Anthropic gets a win in its fight with the Pentagon over its AI in the military.
And the Olympics' bar.
transgender athletes from female events.
This is Reuters World News,
bringing you everything you need to know from the front lines
in 10 minutes, seven days a week.
U.S. President Donald Trump has declared an emergency
and directed the Transportation Security Administration
to begin paying its officers.
The move comes after House Republicans rejected a bipartisan deal
from the Senate that would have restored funding
for airport security.
reporter David Shepardson says TSA workers are about to see some much-needed relief.
So the good news is the chaos of the airports should be ending relatively soon.
And those payments should start hitting their bank accounts as early as Monday.
So the fact that there's a concrete, definitive decision that they're getting paid should go a long way toward addressing big concerns the part of airlines.
and others that we really hit the breaking point.
Today is the second full paycheck that TSA officers have missed on top of one that they missed
most of.
So it's really three paychecks they have mostly not gotten.
We've really heard harrowing stories of TSA workers who had to sell blood plasma or
sleeping in cars or been evicted or facing really difficult financial challenges.
Now that TSA is getting funded, David says there's an open question as to whether Congress will come to an agreement on the rest of the spending bill.
If you're getting whiplash with the developments coming out of Iran, well, there's more.
President Trump has again extended the deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face the destruction of its energy plans until April the 6th.
In a truth social post, Trump said talks with Iran were ongoing and going very well.
Iran, however, has said it is not engaged in talks with Washington.
Trump's decision to extend the pause came just hours after he issued this threat
if Iran doesn't abandon its nuclear program.
If they don't, we're their worst nightmare.
In the meantime, we'll just keep blowing them away.
Inside Iran, debate is growing over whether the country should go
further and pursue a nuclear bomb. Tehran insists it has the right to a civilian nuclear program,
but sources say hardliners emboldened since the killing of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khomeini
are now more openly questioning Iran's long-standing rejection of nuclear weapons.
So with all the two and fro on Iran and the price of oil hitting consumers,
what off-ramps does the US president have to end the war? The 15-point peace-point peace
plan he gave Tehran via mediators has been dismissed as one-sided and unfair, according to one
Iranian official. And White House reporter Trevor Hunnicott says it doesn't look like Trump has
many good options on the table. We're kind of up against the clock and the president is trying to force
an endgame that gets him to his goals, but the situation on the ground might not totally line up
with his political reality, which is that the American people do not like this war. Basically, the president
can seek a diplomatic endgame, right? So he's laid out this 15-point plan. So if they can get Iran
to a yes on that deal, then they can walk away and say, problem solved for now. The problem there
as the Iranians are not suggesting that they're anywhere close to accepting that or even
talking about it seriously. We also have the possibility of a military escalation. So starting to
attack more infrastructure in Iran, sending ground troops in to physically deal with the nuclear
program, attacking Carb Island, all these sorts of operations that would be a massive escalation
from where we are now.
France says it started consultations with dozens of countries on what could be done to reopen
the Strait of Hormuz, once fighting in the Middle East ends.
The talks are being framed as strictly defensive, focused on restoring shipping through
the vital waterway that carries about a fifth of the world's oil.
Early ideas are centred on mine hunting and protecting tankers crossing the area,
highlighting their concerns that threats to Hormoz could persist even after the war ends.
In Asia, the fuel crunch created by tankers still unable to get through the Strait of Hormos
is reviving COVID-era policies.
In Myanmar, a new even-odd-odd, like-afermills.
license plate system means cars are only allowed on the road on alternating days, with gas stations running dry.
India has slashed fuel taxes on petrol and diesel, while factories and restaurants are turning to firewood as gas supplies dry up.
In the Philippines, protesters gather angry over fuel costs.
While Bangladesh has closed universities to conserve electricity.
Nepal and Sri Lanka have begun rationing fuel and cooking gas.
And in Thailand, TV anchors ditched their suits on air,
backing government calls to raise air conditioning temperatures to cut electricity use.
A US judge has handed Anthropic a win in its legal fight with the Pentagon,
temporarily blocking an attempt to cut the AI company out of the US military.
The ruling pauses.
the blacklisting for now, but the case and potential appeals are far from over. Here's
Reuters correspondent Jack Queen on what the judge decided and what comes next. Basically, she said
that this appeared to be classic First Amendment retaliation, that this order based on the timing,
the things that the Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and President Trump were saying about
anthropic being woke AI and all these things were indications that
this determination wasn't really based on a sober and objective analysis of supply chain risks and
national security risks and that it really appeared to be about anthropic publicly refusing to
accept the contractual terms that the Pentagon was insisting on and sticking to its position
that even the best AI models aren't reliable enough for autonomous weapons and that they're
opposed to domestic surveillance as a matter of principle. This is, however, just a preliminary
Minary injunction. And there's another case in D.C. in the works.
It gets very complex legally, but suffice it to say, Anthropic needed to file two separate lawsuits.
And there's actually a lot of uncertainty here because these obscure government procurement
statutes have never been tested in court. And so we're very much in uncharted territory.
Pakistan says its military has resumed operations against Afghanistan after a brief pause for the
Eid Festival, dimming hopes of a lasting ceasefire. The move follows the worst fighting between
the neighbours in years, with Islamabad accusing the Afghan Taliban of harboring militants behind attacks
inside Pakistan, a charge Kabul denies. Pakistan says operations will continue until what it calls
terrorist infrastructure is addressed. The International Olympic Committee has effectively banned
transgender athletes from competing in women's events at the Olympic Games.
games. Under a new policy, all athletes wanting to compete in female categories will have to take
a gene test. Previously, trans athletes could compete if cleared by their sports governing body.
The rule takes effect from the Los Angeles' 2028 Olympics. Here's Reuters correspondent Carlos
Groman with more. It won't affect any prominent athlete because the number of transgender
athletes who have competed in female categories are very, very few.
The IOC says it came to this decision completely impartially.
IOC President Kirstie Coventry said that the process of this had started long before
any election of President Trump to the White House.
It's been an issue that's been under investigation for the last year and a half.
So she rejected that there was any kind of pressure related to anything that is happening
in the United States at the moment.
And finally today, US dollar bills are getting a new signature, that of President Donald Trump.
His name will start making an appearance on notes printed this summer, and is the first time in history.
A sitting president has had his signature on money.
The redesign is to mark the 250th anniversary of US independence, with $100 bills rolling out first.
For more on any of the stories from today,
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