The Headlines - Democrats Win Big in Election Map Fight, and Influencers Push Nicotine as a Health Hack
Episode Date: April 22, 2026Plus, how rainforests can bounce back. Here’s what we’re covering: The Latest on the War in Iran, by The New York Times Democrats Win a Big Battle in the Fight Over Midterm Maps: 4 Takeaways, by... Reid J. Epstein Dark Money Dominates Fund-Raising in the Virginia Referendum Vote, by Theodore Schleifer and Matt Zdun D.H.S. Will Run Out of Money for Paychecks in May, Secretary Says, by Madeleine Ngo and Michael Gold Trump Is Said to Be in Talks to Send Afghans Who Aided U.S. Forces to Congo, by Megha Rajagopalan, Eileen Sullivan and Zolan Kanno-Youngs Influencers Are Spinning Nicotine as a ‘Natural’ Health Hack, by Dani Blum Rainforests Can Bounce Back Much Faster Than Thought, Researchers Say, by Sachi Kitajima Mulkey Tune in every weekday morning, and tell us what you think at: theheadlines@nytimes.com. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Wednesday, April 22nd.
Here's what we're covering.
You're saying that you need at least the prospects for a signed deal today and tomorrow
or else you would resume bombing Iran.
Well, I expect to be bombing because I think that's a better attitude to go in with.
After starting the day, vowing a new wave of attacks against Iran,
President Trump pivoted yesterday afternoon,
announcing that he was indefinitely extending the same.
ceasefire, just hours before it was set to expire. In a statement posted to social media, Trump said
Pakistan, which has been trying to mediate an end to the war, had asked him to keep the
truce going, and he agreed, saying he'll hold off on attacks until Iran comes forward with a proposal.
Iran, however, seemed to dismiss Trump's announcement, with a top government advisor responding,
quote, The extension of the ceasefire by Donald Trump has no meaning. All of this happened just as
Vice President J.D. Vance was expected to fly to Pakistan to continue negotiations. That trip's been
paused for now, but a U.S. official told the Times it could be back on at a moment's notice.
Now, a few more quick updates on the administration and politics. Democrats notched a major win in
Virginia last night, locking in an aggressively gerrymandered new election map that could give the party
four extra seats in Congress. It's the latest example of states redrawing maps in favor of one
party or another ahead of the midterms. The trend kicked off last year after President Trump
urged red states to get the GOP more seats. With control of Congress potentially at stake, a staggering
amount of money went into influencing the Virginia vote, and a lot of it was so-called dark money.
According to a Times analysis of the groups that spent the most on advertising in the race,
at least 96 percent of the nearly $100 million they raised came from nonprofits that don't
disclose their donors. Those kinds of nonprofit groups that can offer anonymity are increasingly
being used to bankroll elections across the country. Also, the money is going extremely fast.
I've got two more weeks. I've got one payroll left. And there is no more emergency fund.
The Secretary of Homeland Security, Mark Wayne Mullen, is warning that the agency is about to run out of
money. Congress has left it unfunded and shut down for more than two months.
And Mullen said even the emergency funding that President Trump had pushed to pay TSA officers is on the verge of drying up, which could reignite chaos at American airports.
Democrats have so far refused to back any funding deal that doesn't include new limits on immigration enforcement.
But Senate Republicans took steps this week to pass a resolution that could go around them.
And the Times has learned that the Trump administration is in talks to potentially send refugees from Afghanistan.
who helped with the American war effort there, to the Democratic Republic of Congo.
According to an aid worker familiar with the plan, the U.S. is considering sending as many as 1,100
refugees to the African country. The group includes former interpreters for the U.S. military
and Afghans who fought alongside Americans. Many Afghans with similar backgrounds have already been
resettled in the U.S., but this group, which was evacuated from Afghanistan to Qatar,
has been living in limbo, in part because the Trump administration has tightened immigration policies.
One of those policies, known as the special visa program, was frozen in the fall after an Afghan man
shot two National Guard members in D.C. Now, the administration could give the group a stark choice,
go back home where they could face retaliation from the Taliban, or go to Congo, which is already
suffering one of the world's worst humanitarian crises. Congo currently has hundreds of thousands of
refugees from neighboring countries, and human rights activists say it's not equipped to take in
any more. In response to questions from the Times, a State Department spokesman said the White
House is focused on, quote, advancing responsible voluntary resettlement options. One former diplomat
pushed back on the potential strategy, saying, who is going to fight alongside the U.S. when the U.S.
betrays the people who stood alongside us.
It might be one of the best natural cures we have for everything from Parkinson's to arthritis.
Influencers online are increasingly talking about a substance that they say can help you.
Live longer, think sharper, reverse the risk of Alzheimer's disease.
It helps me slow down. It helps with recall.
Helps processing speed, I notice.
And even make you more productive and happier.
It is subtle at low dose, but it's just like, wow, everything just got easier.
I've been really surprised to find out that what they're talking about,
as nicotine. Times health reporter Danny Bloom has been digging into how nicotine is getting hyped up
online as a quote-unquote natural health hack. Every single long COVID patient and every symptom
that persist for years is completely eradicated with a 7 milligram nicotine patch. Influencers aren't
necessarily advocating for everybody to start smoking, but they're pushing patches, gums, lozenges,
and pouches with nicotine, which is highly addictive. And Danny says, many of the people promoting it
are aligned with the Make America Healthy Again movement.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. himself has been photographed carrying a tin of Zinn,
a brand of nicotine pouch.
And Tucker Carlson, the conservative TV host, has claimed the pouches are life-saving and can
increase male vitality. He even sells his own brand.
A number of them are using the same rhetoric that I've seen really bubble up within the
maha space. And so you have influencers claiming that nicotine is natural.
There are some that say that the pharmaceutical industry doesn't want you to know about the benefits of nicotine because they would rather have you shell out for prescription drugs.
There's a real mindset and a mentality within the Maha movement that emphasizes this idea of the ability to put whatever you want in your body and to really challenge establishment wisdom.
And so it's really been fascinating to see the ways in which this push for nicotine has slotted really nicely into this ecosystem that Maha has created.
Danny says when she talked to medical experts about this trend, they warned that many
influencers' claims about nicotine are unproven and that the drug can pose a health risk,
especially to young people.
One expert who has studied tobacco products said, quote,
it's alarming that people who appear to be very health-conscious are allowing themselves
to participate in a giant human biology experiment when we know that nicotine is extremely harmful.
And finally, a new study shows that rainforests may be able to.
more resilient than scientists knew. The critical ecosystems have been disappearing at an alarming
rate as much as 18 soccer fields a minute. And scientists studying them have found that it generally
takes about a century for the trees and plants to fully regrow. They largely assumed it would
also take about 100 years for the animals to come back too. But new research published this month
in the journal Nature shows that the forest creatures can actually bounce back much more quickly. A team
studied dozens of patches of forest in Ecuador that had been slashed to make way for cacao plantations
or cattle pastures, and found that the majority of mammals, insects, and birds had returned after
just three decades. One ecologist, who was not involved in the study, called it a message of hope.
Now, the researchers say there are caveats. One of the most important is that they were looking at
patches of deforested land that were next to untouched forests. They say that's crucial because
basically the animals were able to shelter nearby and then make their way back over as the land
recovered. Those are the headlines. Today on the Daily, what dozens of current and former FBI
employees say has happened at the Bureau under the leadership of Cash Patel. You can listen to that
in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.
