The Headlines - Labor Secretary Resigns Amid Scandals, and F.B.I. Director Sues Over Drinking Claims
Episode Date: April 21, 2026Plus, what to know about Apple’s next C.E.O. Here’s what we’re covering: Facing Hard-Liners at Home and Bluster From Trump, Iran Sends Mixed Signals on Peace Talks, by Erika Solomon Labor Secr...etary Steps Down Amid Internal Investigation, by Rebecca Davis O’Brien F.B.I. Director Sues The Atlantic Over Article Claiming Excessive Drinking, by Katie Robertson Fight Over Maps Escalates in Race for Control of Congress, by Reid J. Epstein and Nick Corasaniti A Wish List for the Man Replacing Tim Cook as Apple’s C.E.O., by Brian X. Chen The Onion Has a New Plan to Take Over Infowars, by Benjamin Mullin and Elizabeth Williamson 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 Tuesday, April 21st.
Here's what we're covering.
In Washington, D.C., President Trump's Secretary of Labor has resigned
as multiple scandals and investigations closed in on her.
Lori Chavez-Daremer has been under investigation
by the Labor Department's Inspector General,
which was looking into claims of widespread misconduct by her, her family, and her staff.
There's also been a parallel inquiry by Congress
and together they've surfaced a range of embarrassing accusations.
Chavez-Durremer was accused of having an affair with a member of her security detail.
There were allegations that she and her staff used taxpayer dollars for personal trips,
spending money on fancy hotels and SUV rentals,
and text messages reviewed by the time suggested she was drinking during the workday.
Beyond that, staff members filed civil rights complaints describing a hostile work environment,
and witnesses claimed her aides had tried to steal.
federal grants to favored political operatives. In addition to Chavez-Dareemer's own conduct,
the investigations were looking into personal text messages that her father and husband were sending
to young female staffers at the department. According to people familiar with the inquiry,
the labor secretary told some of the women to, quote, pay attention to the men.
Earlier this year, Chavez-Darimer's husband was barred from the agency's D.C. headquarters
after being accused of making unwanted sexual advances.
allegations his lawyer says are false.
In response to questions about her resignation,
one of Chavez-Durimers' lawyers said she, quote,
did not resign because she violated the law.
No such finding exists.
And a White House spokesman said she had, quote,
done a phenomenal job in her role by protecting American workers.
The deputy Labor Secretary, Keith Sondering,
will now step up in an acting capacity.
Multiple employees told the times
he's already effectively been doing the job
since the secretary was almost never at the office.
Shavez-Durimer is now the fourth senior cabinet official
to step down or be fired in President Trump's second term.
Republican Senator Tom Tillis told reporters
that he thinks Congress needs to do a better job
of vetting administration nominees.
He said, quote,
where benefit of the doubt was given in the past,
you've got to doubt.
Meanwhile, a flurry of accusations has engulfed
another top Trump administration official.
Cash Patel,
the director of the FBI, sued the Atlantic yesterday, accusing the magazine of defamation after it published
an article saying he drinks excessively and has been frequently absent from his job.
The article cited more than two dozen anonymous sources who said Patel drinks to the point of obvious intoxication,
including at members-only clubs in D.C. and Vegas, and said his conduct has alarmed his colleagues.
In Patel's lawsuit, which asks for $250 million in damages,
He accused the Atlantic of printing obviously fabricated allegations
and said he'd been given less than two hours to comment on a list of 19 claims.
Later today, Vice President J.D. Vance is expected to fly to Pakistan for potential peace talks with Iran.
There's less than 24 hours to go until the current ceasefire expires.
Publicly, Iran is trying to send the signals that their participation is not a given.
privately, we are hearing that Iranian officials are still planning to try to make it to the talks in Pakistan this week.
My colleague Erica Solomon has been covering the war.
She says Iranian officials know a deal is critical to stop the attacks and to dig out from the country's deep economic crisis caused by years of sanctions.
But Erica says Iran's mixed messaging about the negotiations reflects the multiple pressures the regime is facing.
One is internal.
There is a huge, very emboldened base in Iran that feels like they won this war.
They survived U.S. and Israeli bombardment.
They managed to basically close the Strait of Hormuz to the global oil trade.
They're protesting every night.
They're going out waving rifles, flags.
And they've been saying, like, no surrender, no capitulation.
This is the base that kind of underpins the government.
They can't completely defy them.
They have to find a solution that makes these people feel.
feel like they're not just giving up. The second and most argue more important issue is President
Trump himself. He has been putting out a lot of threatening statements, vowing that he could go
forward with bombing the country's infrastructure. So they feel like Trump is trying to push them
into a corner. And they don't even fully trust yet that the Americans are actually going to
negotiate in good faith. They still have a little bit of anxiety. They could get attacked by Israel
the United States while they're heading to negotiations or on their way back. So the trust is so
incredibly low from the Iranian perspective. It's just, it's hard to exaggerate, you know, just how
wary they are. As the war stretches into its eighth week, the headlines is taking your questions about
the conflict on the negotiations, the straight-of-war moves, what it means for the Gulf, what it means for
the world. You can send us them at the headlines at n.Y times.com.
Richmond liberals want to end competitive elections in Virginia.
In Virginia, voters have been getting bombarded by messaging around redistricting, redrawing the state's election map.
Free and fair elections are the cornerstone of our democracy, but right now they are under threat.
The political battle has been supercharged with even former President Obama weighing in,
urging Virginians to support a Democratic-led redistricting effort that's up for a vote today.
This is all an escalation of the map fight that President Trump kicked off last year
when he urged red states to red-states to red-draud districts to give the GOP a boost.
Lawmakers in Texas, Missouri, and other states did that, and since then, Democrats have been fighting fire with fire.
In Virginia, for example, if their referendum passes, Democrats could potentially pick up four extra seats in Congress.
Nationwide, it's not clear where the dust will settle. It's possible with all the tit-for-tenths.
that the number of shifting seats will come out as a draw for the two parties.
What the high-profile redistricting fight has done, though, is change the conversation around
gerrymandering. Even Obama himself criticized it in the past, but now many lawmakers and voters
are calling it a necessary evil. Essentially, if the other side's going to do it, so are we.
Apple announced yesterday that its CEO, Tim Cook, will step down after 15 years running the
company, during which time he helped turn the iPhone into one of the best-selling products in
history. With Cook at the helm, Apple became the first public company worth $1 trillion. That number
is now $4 trillion. But he could never quite get out of the shadow of the company's legendary
founder, Steve Jobs, and he faced years of questions about whether Apple would be able to follow
up the iPhone with other revolutionary new products. In recent years, the company has grown by leaning more
into services like Apple Pay and ICloud, along with raising the prices of its devices.
Investors have also worried about its long-term strategy for AI. The company has largely stayed
on the sidelines as the rest of Silicon Valley has gone all in on the technology.
Cook will officially step down in September, and the company's chosen John Ternis to take over.
He's the head of hardware engineering at Apple and a relative unknown outside the company.
The same pressures that Cook faced to create some.
something new and big are set to follow
Ternus into the role. With one
former longtime Apple employee telling
the Times, he will have to, quote,
find a way to have Apple make products that make
a dent in the universe again.
And finally, my name is Tim Heidecker.
I'm just here to let you know that I
am now in charge of Info Wars.
It's an honor to take over
the reins, and we're not really sure
what we're going to do with it.
The Onion, the satirical news outlet, has a new
plan to take control of InfoWars.
Wars, the right-wing conspiracy website. The fate of Info Wars has been in limbo since its founder
Alex Jones was ordered to pay over a billion dollars in defamation suits for falsely claiming
the Sandy Hook School shooting was a hoax. He declared bankruptcy, leading to the sell-off of assets.
At that point, The Onion, best known for headlines like, study reveals babies are stupid,
or wealthy teen nearly experiences consequences, put in a bid to take over the
the InfoWars brand. Jones has been fighting that ever since. He's continued to operate the website
and host its flagship program, the Alex Jones Show. But now, the onions got a licensing deal on the works
with the court-appointed administrator of the site that would give it the InfoWars domain and the name.
The Onion wants to relaunch it as a platform that skewers the kind of fringe conspiracy theories
that Jones became famous for, and it plans to share proceeds with the Sandy Hook families. The chief executive
of the Onion's parent company said, quote,
we are excited to lie constantly for cold, hard cash,
but this time in a cool way,
and we'll make sure some of it gets back to the families.
Those are the headlines.
Again, we are taking your questions about the war with Iran.
You can send them to us at the Headlines at NYTimes.com.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.
