Up First from NPR - Trump's Hormuz Deadline, Congress DHS Funding, ICE In Airports
Episode Date: March 23, 2026President Trump has given Iran 48 hours to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face strikes on its power plants and Iran is threatening to close the vital shipping waterway indefinitely if he follows throu...gh. Congress returns this week with airport lines growing and TSA agents going unpaid, as President Trump links any DHS deal to a long list of new demands including voter ID and ending mail-in voting. And hundreds of ICE agents have been deployed to help address chaos in airports across the U.S., but mixed messages have left questions about what they will actually do ease security lines.Want more analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today’s episode of Up First was edited by Hannah Bloch, Anna Yukhananov, Mohamad ElBardicy, and Alice Woelfle.It was produced by Ziad Buchh and Ava Pukatch.Our director is Christopher Thomas.We get engineering support from Zo van Ginhoven. Our technical director is Carleigh Strange.(0:00) Introduction(01:57) Trump's Hormuz Deadline(05:50) Congress DHS Funding(09:18) ICE In AirportsTo manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below:See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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President Trump threatens to bomb Iran's power plants if it doesn't open the strait of Hormuz.
Iran says it'll close down the oil shipping lane and attack regional power plants if the president follows through.
I'm Michelle Martin. That's A. Martinez. And this is up first from NPR News.
Congress returns this week with a familiar mess on its hands. It's day 38 of a partial government shutdown that's left TSA agents unpaid and with long security lines at some airports.
Now President Trump is telling Senate Republicans no DHS deal unless Democrats agreed to his voting reforms.
And Trump's fix for the airport chaos send in ICE.
Starting today, immigration and customs enforcement agents will be at airports across the country.
What can they actually do to speed up those security lines?
Stay with us.
We'll give you all the news you need to start your day.
The war in the Middle East is now in its fourth week, and President Trump is trading threats with Iran as a tax escalate on both sides.
President Trump has threatened the U.S. will quote,
obliterate Iran's power plants if Iran does not let ships go through the Strait of Hormuz by this evening.
Iran has countered with its powerful security forces saying they will close the strait indefinitely if the U.S. carries out the president's threat.
With us, Ms. MPR's Emily, who is at the Turkish border with Iran. Emily, the Strait of Hormuz has really become a really critical part of the war with Iran.
Tell us exactly what Iran is threatening to do.
Good morning, A. So Iran is letting through a handful of ships still that belong to countries it perceives as neutral.
But then this weekend, a spokesperson for Iran's military operational command center said that the U.S. went ahead and destroyed Iran's power plants.
The strait would totally close until Iran could rebuild those plants.
Iran is also threatened to destroy more infrastructure that it sees as supporting U.S. and Israeli interests in the Middle East.
That could include water desalination plants, which Gulf countries are very reliant on.
And about a fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas supply passes through the strait normally.
And so energy prices are way up.
Countries in Asia are already rationing jet fuel.
And Egypt said it would implement a curfew starting next week to cut down on their energy use.
Now, no, Iran also fired missiles over the weekend, including on Israel,
and an attempt to hit a joint U.S.-UK. military base in the Indian Ocean.
What do we know about those attacks?
Right.
So Iran's been firing waves of retaliatory drones and missiles towards its neighbors,
including that missile launch you mentioned, which missed the Diego Garcia military base.
But it was alarming because it showed Iran's missiles,
travel farther than experts had expected.
Another one of Iran strikes hit southern Israel Saturday night near the country's nuclear
research facility that injured more than 200 people.
And Israel said earlier today that it was launching more retaliatory attacks on Iran.
Then in the Gulf, Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E said they intercepted Iranian missiles and drones
over the weekend.
And in what appears to be a first, Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps says they fired missiles with
cluster warheads, that's their words, towards Arab countries and even showed a video of
So the effects of this conflict are all over the region, including here where I am on the border
with Iran, where you might be able to hear them.
There are dozens of Iranians every hour crossing over, leaving their country wallets at war.
But interestingly, some are going back in to see their families, despite knowing that
the U.S. might bomb power plants soon.
What are the Iranians that you're seeing and meeting saying about the war?
So three people just now told us they're leaving Iran because they heard the U.S. might bomb
plants.
But one person also added, they said, I hope the U.S. hits their time.
targets and bombs Iran, which might be hard for people to understand.
A lot of people in Tehran said they've heard heavy bombing over the last few weeks in the city.
One man said his family lived about 500 yards from one of Iran's largest hospitals
and describes the fear of seeing a strike and hit the hospital and destroy it in early March
and watching the survivors escape.
And then a second man told us on record, he left Iran just a few days ago,
and he told us this about the Ramadan holidays last week.
So he says in Tehran, Iran's powerful security forces
started giving out free food right next to these new checkpoints they've set up.
And he believes they are deliberately trying to put civilians in harm's way
because these are checkpoints that Israel has been heavily bombing.
What's really scary for people is not just the U.S. and Israeli strikes,
but also the government-imposed internet blackout in Iran.
People say they cannot receive warnings about where the next strikes
will be. And in that complete absence of information is absolute fear.
That's NPR's Emily Fang in Turkey's Van Province, just a few yards away from the border with Iran.
Emily, thank you for your reporting.
Thanks, A.
Members of Congress will face some difficult and familiar problems when they return a session this week.
Both parties are struggling to strike a deal to fund the Department of Homeland Security to help alleviate chaos at U.S. airports.
And the first big hurdle is in the Senate.
Here's Senate Majority Leader John Thune talking to reporters earlier this weekend.
This is a pox on everybody's house.
When you got people standing in lines at airports, this needs to get fixed.
It needs to get resolved.
Senate Republicans need Democrats help to get DHS funded again ahead of an upcoming recess.
NPR congressional correspondent, Laude Grisales, is here now.
So funding expired what, more than a month ago for DHS.
What's holding up any deal?
Right.
Good morning, A.
Both sides remain deeply entrenched since the agency largely ran out of funds, February 14th.
And as we know, Democrats are demanding significant reforms for immigration enforcement agents.
They want agents to remove their masks, for example, a sticking point for the GOP.
So this fight is keeping workers at several DHS components, including the Transportation Security Administration,
from getting paychecks and resulting in those long airport lines we're seeing.
Do the senators see any way out at this stage?
Well, it depends who you ask.
Thune and other Republicans say they've put offers on the table that Democrats should accept.
Democrats argue Republicans should agree to fund all of the other.
other DHS components like TSA because last year, Republicans directed major appropriations to the
agency's immigration side through a partisan bill. Here's Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer.
We will keep doing this and doing this until the Republicans see the light, feel the pressure
that they are holding up payment and relent. We're also watching if any Senate Democrats break
ranks, but it's not clear that happens in the near future. For now, Thune could cancel a two-week
recess set to start one week from today if there's no deal.
in hand. And another thing, I'm glad to factor in is that the GOP-led Senate is also on track to vote for a new DHS
secretary today. Right. Oklahoma Republican Senator Mark Wayne Mullen is on track for confirmation
to the role tonight. So surprisingly yesterday, we saw two Senate Democrats join Republicans to move
forward on this vote. That's a signal Mullen is seen as a much more reasonable negotiator than
his predecessor, Christine Nome. He's already said he would look at allowing judicial warrants rather than
administrative warrants in some cases, and that's a big demand for Democrats giving them hope of a
breakthrough. I also saw that President Trump demanded Republicans tied DHS funding to another bill this
week, and he posted online telling Republicans not to end the shutdown until Democrats agreed to pass
his Save America Act, which includes major voting reforms. Tell us more about that one.
Yes, Trump has made the stricter voter ID law the priority for Congress to handle it would require
proof of citizenship to register to vote, and that's a non-starter for Democrats.
They say that would actually deter citizens from voting because of the new burden.
Previously, Trump threatened the legislative blockade to only sign DHS appropriations into law until the SAVE Act passed Congress.
So this new threat is a reversal.
It's probably throwing a wrench into bipartisan talks to fund DHS now.
He's also pushed for this law to include a provision addressing gender in sports, but an amendment to do just that failed over the weekend.
And it's clear Senate Republicans do not have the votes right now to pay.
past the Save America Act bill yet, but Republicans want to keep the debate going.
That's NPR's Claudia Grisales. Thanks a lot. Thank you.
New York's LaGuardia Airport is shut down this morning after a plane crashed into a fire truck
on a runway late last night. Pictures show the front of an Air Canada jet was ripped off in the crash.
The pilot and co-pilot are dead, according to the Port Authority. Forty-one people were sent to
hospital. The crash was an isolated incident, but another blow to air travel, which is already a
pain point for many travelers due, as we've said, to the partial government shutdown, which has
caused TSA agents to work without pay. Each day, more TSA agents quit or call in sick, resulting
in long security lines that are causing serious delays at other airports around the United States.
President Trump's solution, send in immigration and customs enforcement agents to help.
Starting today, he's sending hundreds of agents to airports across the country.
NPR's Luke Garrett is on the story. Luke, what do we know about this deployment?
Well, it all started with a post on social media. On Sunday, President Trump directed federal immigration agents to report to airports the next day.
The goal, Trump says, is to help TSA officers who are facing staffing shortages.
Trump turned to one of his favorite fixers, White House Bordersar Tom Homan, to lead the ICE deployments to U.S. airports.
All right, so what's Holman saying about how this is all going to work?
Well, Homan said he's still working on the final plan. What he said is that, you know, ICE agents will guard the U.S. agents will guard the U.
the exits and entry points at the nation's busiest airports. Notably, though, he told CNN,
these immigration agents, you know, will likely stay away from the specialized airport security work.
I don't see an ICE agent looking at an X-ray machine because we're not trained in that.
There are certain parts of security that TSA is doing that we can move them off those jobs
and put them in the specialized jobs to help move those lines.
But there was some confusion about the plan because Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy,
you know, told ABC News, ICE could work those TSA security lines.
They know how to pat people down.
They know how to run the x-ray machines because they are, again, under homeland security.
These mixed messages are raising a lot of questions over what exactly ICE agents will do at U.S. airports.
DHS didn't give me many more details when I reached out to them.
In a statement, spokeswoman Lauren Biss blamed Democrats for the airport delays.
Biss also told NPR, hundreds of ICE officers will be deployed to, quote, adversely impacted airports.
Yeah, so ICE officers, why tap ICE agents for this?
So one reason is money.
Last summer, the GOP-controlled Congress.
Congress passed billions in spending for ICE. And that money lets ICE keep the lights on and pay its agents.
Meanwhile, the rest of DHS, which includes TSA, can't pay their workers during this partial shutdown.
So Trump is basically shifting workers within DHS to solve this immediate problem of, you know, airport staff shortages.
All right. So what are we hearing from Democrats then?
So House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries threw the blame back at the White House and the GOP-controlled Congress.
Here's Jeffries on CNN.
The last thing that the American people need are for untrained ICE agents.
to be deployed at airports all across the country.
And the White House is also facing some pushback from the union representing TSA workers.
Here's the union's policy director, Jacqueline Simon.
It will be easier for somebody with malintent to get through a security checkpoint with an untrained ice agent there instead of a trained transportation security officer.
Simon says the TSA workers just want to get paid for their work.
And they're furious at the prospect that Congress might go on recess before making a deal on DHS.
Luke, one more question. Will ICE continue their immigration work as they assist TSA?
So, Homan did address this very question. In short, yes, according to him. The border czar said ICE has done immigration enforcement at airports before, and this new deployment doesn't change that. But again, we're getting some mixed messages here.
Atlanta's mayor, Andre Dickon, said in a statement that he believed ICE wouldn't conduct immigration enforcement at his city's airport.
That's NPR's Luke. Gareth. Luke, thanks a lot. You bet.
And that's up first for Monday, March 23rd. I'm
and I'm Michelle Martin. Today's episode of Up First was edited by Hannah Block, Anna Yucananov,
Mohamed El Bardisi, and Alice Wolffley. It was produced by Zaid Butch and Ava Pukatch.
Our director is Christopher Thomas. We get engineering support from Zoe Van Genhoven.
Our technical director is Carly Strange. We hope you'll join us again tomorrow.
