The Headlines - War Pushes Gas Prices Near $4 a Gallon, and Anti-Trump Protesters Rally Nationwide
Episode Date: March 30, 2026Plus, a surge of Catholic converts in the Unites States. Here’s what we’re covering: Trump Says Iran to Allow More Oil Ships Through Strait of Hormuz, by David E. Sanger, Aaron Boxerman and Sanam ...Mahoozi U.S. Allows Russian Oil Tanker to Reach Cuba, Despite Blockade, by Jack Nicas and Eric Schmitt What We Know About Pay for T.S.A. Workers, by Madeleine Ngo ICE May Remain at Airports Even After T.S.A. Pay Resumes, Border Czar Says, by Aishvarya Kavi 5 Takeaways From the ‘No Kings’ Rallies as the Midterms Heat Up, by Tim Balk Roman Catholic Churches See a Surge of New Converts, by Elizabeth Dias 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, it's the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford.
Today's Monday, March 30th.
Here's what we're covering.
The war in Iran has now crossed the five-week mark.
And this morning, we're looking at how the conflict is expanding,
the new wave of U.S. troops that were just deployed,
and how gas prices are about to hit a new high.
To start, another front in the war has opened
as the Houthis, an Iran-backed militia in Yemen,
opened fire on Israel this weekend,
launching at least one missile at the country.
And Israel and the U.S. continued to pound Tehran with airstrikes.
One resident told the times that they felt, quote,
hours and hours of explosions.
Iran also stepped up its retaliation,
launching a wave of drones and missiles at a military base in Saudi Arabia,
injuring 12 American soldiers.
It was one of the most serious breaches of U.S. air defenses since the war started.
Are you considering still putting boots on the ground
Would you do that without going to come home?
I just have lots of alternatives.
We have tremendous numbers of ships over there.
Also, as of this weekend, President Trump has new options if he decides to turn up the pressure on Iran.
According to two U.S. military officials, several hundred special ops forces,
including Army Rangers and Navy SEALs, have now arrived in the Middle East,
joining thousands of recently deployed Marines and Army paratroopers.
And on the energy front.
I think out of a sign of respect, 20 boats of oil, big, big boats of oil.
Trump said that Iran is going to let some oil tankers pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
He framed it as a sign that talks with Iran to end the war were underway and going well.
It wasn't immediately clear who the ships belonged to or where they would be headed.
Still, any oil or gas getting through would be a major development.
Since Iranian forces all but cut off the crucial waterway, global energy.
energy prices have soared. The cost of oil has climbed over 50 percent compared to before the war.
And in the U.S., gas prices are approaching an average of $4 a gallon.
Now, more on an energy crisis in a different part of the world. For months, the U.S. has had
an effective oil blockade on Cuba as the Trump administration tries to force political and
economic changes in the communist-ruled country. It has cut the island off from fuel,
upending everyday life there.
I can tell you that the situation on the ground is quite dire.
The biggest impact from the U.S. blockade on Cuba has been the daily blackouts.
Jack Nickus covers Cuba for the times,
and he says some of the most severe consequences so far
have been to the country's health care system.
The hospitals are canceling surgeries because many doctors and nurses can't commute to work.
Many clinics are struggling to administer treatments like chemotherapy,
because of the power outages. Many ambulances are parked. Pharmacies are largely empty. They've
halted medicine production because many of the factories run on diesel. All of this together has
really resulted in a significant worsening of health care in Cuba, which once was a triumph for the
nation. And six separate doctors we spoke to said that those rapidly deteriorating conditions
were already causing deaths that would otherwise be preventable. This weekend, the Times learned that
the U.S. Coast Guard is going to allow one Russian tanker full of oil to reach Cuba,
buying the nation at least a few weeks before its reserves totally run out, according to analysts.
The ship, which is owned by the Russian government, was already very close to Cuba as of last night.
It's unclear why the White House is letting it through, though the decision avoids a potentially
thorny confrontation with Russia in the waters just off the coast of Florida.
In Washington, to catch you up quickly on the Department of Homeland Security shutdown,
it is still shut down with no new funding.
This gambit that was done last night is a joke.
I'm quite convinced that it can't be that every Senate Republican read the language of this bill.
House Republicans angrily rejected a bipartisan deal late Friday,
the one their colleagues in the Senate struck with Democrats to fund everything at DHS
except ICE and Border Patrol.
The rejection has highlighted a major rift within the GOP,
with hard-right Republicans in the House ripping on Senate Republicans
for what they considered caving to Democrats' demands.
We read the bill, and we said, no, Mr. Speaker,
that is not the responsible thing to do for this country.
The stalemate has resulted in the exact situation many lawmakers
had been trying to avoid.
Congress is now scheduled to be.
off for Easter break. That means the partial shutdown, which is already the longest on record at 40-plus
days, will likely last until mid-A April at least. TSA agents, though, should get paychecks as soon as
today, after President Trump ordered DHS to find the funds to do it. Before this, hundreds of TSA officers
had quit and absence rates spiked, causing hours-long security lines and people missing their flights.
Amid the chaos, the White House deployed ice agents to airports.
Over the weekend, the administration said those deployments would continue for now.
Also this weekend, protesters against the Trump administration gathered around the country for no king's rallies.
There are a lot of people here.
The organizers said eight million people took part, one of the largest protests in recent history.
The Times has not independently confirmed the numbers spread over thousands of protest sites.
All power to the people!
One of the largest gatherings took place outside the Minnesota State Capitol,
where people turned out in part to protest the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretty
by federal agents in Minneapolis this year.
Opposition to ICE and the administration's immigration crackdown
remained a key part of the rallying cry at the protests,
but there were also chance of end this war,
At least in some places, the war in Iran seemed to be motivating many younger people to turn out.
A 22-year-old organizer at a rally near the University of Iowa said the crowd there was a lot younger than at previous No King's demonstrations, which she attributed in part to anger over the new conflict in the Middle East.
The White House itself has mocked the nationwide protests.
An administration spokeswoman said earlier that, quote,
The only people who care about these Trump derangement therapy sessions are the reporters who are paid to cover them.
And finally, every year at a mass the night before Easter, the Roman Catholic Church welcomes new converts.
This weekend, in the U.S., there will be a surprising number of them.
The Archdiocese of Detroit will have almost 1,500, most in two decades.
The same trend is happening in Los Angeles and Phoenix, as well as smaller rural places like Gallup, New Mexico, and Allentown, Pennsylvania.
One cardinal told the times that when a bunch of bishops got together at a conference recently,
they were all asking each other, what's your number? What's your number? For quite a while,
the broader Christian population in the U.S. had been declining, but a survey from Pew showed last
year that it stabilized. As for why Catholicism in particular is calling to people, there are a lot of
theories. Some converts told the times they were feeling disconnected or lonely, and they felt like the
church could help with that. Others said they were drawn in by Catholic podcast stars that they
came across on social media. Still, what exactly is behind the surge has stumped even church
leadership? Cardinal Robert McElroy of Washington said, quote,
of course we think the Holy Spirit is, but we are kind of stymied. Those are the headlines.
I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow.
