The Headlines - Trump to Address the Nation About War Plans, and TMZ Goes After Congress
Episode Date: April 1, 2026Plus, what to know about NASA’s moon mission. Here’s what we’re covering: Around the Moon and Back in 10 Days, by Marco Hernandez and Kenneth Chang Trump Says U.S. Will Be Out of Iran Within T...wo to Three Weeks, by Tyler Pager and Edward Wong Justices Reject Colorado Law Banning ‘Conversion Therapy’ for L.G.B.T.Q. Minors, by Ann E. Marimow Trump Signs Order Seeking Federal Control of Mail Voting as He Promotes False Claims, by Nick Corasaniti and Michael Gold Judge Orders Construction Stopped on Trump’s White House Ballroom, by Zach Montague TMZ Sics Its Tipsters on a New Breed of Celebrity Villain: Members of Congress, by Catie Edmondson 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 1st.
Here's what we're covering.
I just landed in Houston.
This is where NASA's mission control is for its first moon mission with humans on board in more than 50 years.
My colleague Katrina Miller is on the ground in Texas to track the launch of the Artemis II mission.
It's currently scheduled for tonight, barring bad weather or other complications.
The capsule, which will be carried into space on a 300-plus-foot rocket,
is set to travel around the moon, taking the astronauts farther from the Earth than anyone has been since 1972.
Four astronauts are flying aboard the spacecraft.
They will launch from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
They will loop around the Earth and then do a trans-luner injection burn toward the moon.
Loop around the far side of the moon and then around day 10, they will splash down off the coast of California.
The crew will get to see and photograph the far side of the moon,
the part that we never see from Earth with their own eyes.
But ultimately, Artemis II is a test flight in a series of missions by NASA
to return humans to the surface of the moon and then hopefully eventually someday travel beyond it.
The two-hour launch window will start tonight at 6.24 p.m.
If all goes according to plan, this could pave the way for more Artemis missions.
That includes two lunar landing.
attempts set for 2028 to meet President Trump's goal of sending astronauts back to the moon
before the end of his term.
The U.S. has found itself in a space race once again, as China has said it's planning to try
and land astronauts on the moon by 2030.
We're finishing the job, and I think within maybe two weeks, maybe a couple of days longer,
to do the job.
In the Oval Office yesterday, President Trump said the U.S. will end its military.
military campaign in Iran in the next few weeks. And he promised to address the nation tonight
with what the White House says will be an important update on the war.
I had one goal. They will have no nuclear weapon. And that goal has been attained.
They will not have... Trump declared that the U.S. has completely eliminated any nuclear threat
from Iran, a claim that is not backed up by any evidence. Iran still has nearly a thousand pounds
of highly enriched uranium, which could be used to build a nuclear weapon.
Yesterday, the stock market surged amid hopes of the war ending soon.
Trump's address is scheduled for 9 p.m. Eastern tonight.
Meanwhile, in Lebanon...
Israel has issued these sweeping evacuation warnings for much of southern Lebanon, about 10% of the country.
But our reporting has shown that in private, they're giving a more targeted message.
Christina Goldbaum covers Lebanon for the Times, and she's found that Israel isn't telling everyone to leave.
from the areas it's targeting.
Israeli military officials have been calling
several Christian and Drew's communities
and assuring them that they can stay
and that they're actually only focused on driving Shiites out.
Shiite Muslims are from the same sect as Hezbollah,
the Iran-backed militant group, Israel's fighting in Lebanon.
I went to Calcaba, a Maronite Christian town
near the border with Israel.
It's a town that, after the last escalation between Hezbollah
and Israel, had taken in around
two dozen Shia families who had been displaced from their border village.
When we were there, we were talking to the deputy mayor who was telling us how other villages
nearby had gotten these calls from Israeli military officials, telling them that if they had
Shia who had been displaced living in their towns, they needed to tell them to leave.
Otherwise, their town would not be safe from Israeli bombardment.
And she was telling us how she had gone to these displaced Shia families, told them to
prepare themselves that if they got a call telling them to expel their Shia residents, the town would
do so. And later that day, the mayor of the town got the call from Israeli military officials,
and within 24 hours, they had put those displaced Shia families on buses heading north out from
Calcuba. Having spoken to Shia residents, to municipal leaders, to other local leaders
who've been receiving these calls, it's become clear to them that Israel is not only in
on changing the geographic map of southern Lebanon,
but also the demographic one.
The message that they understand
is that Christians and Druze will be allowed to stay.
And now, Shia Lebanese who have fled the South
are increasingly concerned that they may never be able
to return to their homes.
Now, back to Washington for a few quick updates.
At the Supreme Court yesterday,
the justices handed conservatives a major win
in a case about so-called conversion
therapy for LGBTQ minors. In an eight-to-one decision, the court threw out a Colorado law that
banned mental health professionals from using talk therapy to try and change kids' sexual orientation
or gender identity. The justices said the law was a, quote, egregious assault on free speech
and the First Amendment. The court's decision has implications for more than 20 other states that
have similar laws barring conversion therapy, which critics and major medical organizations
say is ineffective and potentially dangerous for young people.
Also,
We're going to be signing an executive order.
I believe it's foolproof.
And maybe it'll be tested.
Maybe it won't.
President Trump is stepping up his efforts to take more federal control over elections,
signing an executive order yesterday that would create a national list of eligible voters
and restrict mail-in ballots.
It's part of his ongoing effort to promote his false claims.
of widespread voter fraud, and it could violate the Constitution.
The president has no explicit authority to manage elections,
a power the Constitution gives to states in Congress.
Trump's previous executive orders around elections,
including one requiring proof of citizenship to vote,
have largely been blocked by the courts.
And last update.
Basically, he's saying I need congressional approval,
and he's so wrong.
President Trump is vowing to fight an order from a federal judge that's temporarily blocked construction of his ballroom.
In the decision, which was handed down yesterday, the judge wrote that work on the massive White House expansion has to stop, quote,
unless and until Congress blesses this project.
The National Trust for Historic Preservation, which has been leading the court battle against the ballroom,
has raised concerns about the breakneck speed at which it's moved forward and how it's being paid for.
hearings about it have been going on for months, and the judge appeared to lose patience with the government's lawyer, asking him at one point to, quote, be serious and back off claims that the $400 million undertaking is comparable to minor renovations that previous presidents have done, like adding a tennis court.
And finally, every picture we get of a Congress man or woman vacationing in the next two weeks, we want those pictures.
The Hollywood tabloid TMZ, which is known for sending paparazzi and tipsters after celebrities,
is turning its sights on Congress.
We got Ted Cruz leaving this morning.
The site's founder, Harvey Levin, said that since lawmakers jetted off on their spring recess last week,
without reaching a deal to reopen the Department of Homeland Security,
he wants every picture people can send in of senators and representatives out there living it up
and not funding the government.
We have Lindsay Graham at Disney World.
We got Robert Garcia in Vegas.
In response to their pictures being posted on the site,
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said that his Florida trip
was part of a meeting with administration officials.
And Representative Robert Garcia, a Democrat,
said he was visiting his dad in Las Vegas,
though he wrote,
actually, I don't mind what TMZ is doing here,
saying he didn't think lawmakers should have been sent home
with no deal in place.
Those are the headlines.
One big story to watch this morning.
The Supreme Court will hear arguments about President Trump's push to end birthright citizenship for many immigrants.
You can follow along with live coverage in the New York Times app or at NYTimes.com.
I'm Tracy Mumford. The headlines will be back tomorrow.
