Live from NPR News in Washington on Corv.
after a weaker than expected jobs report.
“NPR Scott Horsley reports the Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 800 points”
or about 2% in early trading. After an enemic year of hiring in 2025, policymakers had hope for some stabilization in the job market, but a new report from the Labor Department shows continued weakness. US employers cut 92,000 jobs last month and revised figures show the economy also lost jobs in December.
News of the softening job market comes at a time when Americans are already nervous about the high cost of living and those concerns will likely be amplified by the US War with Iran, which is triggered as sharp rise in energy prices. Triple A's is the average price of gasoline, jumped another 7 cents overnight at 332 a gallon gasoline now cost 21 cents more than it did at this time last year.
The price of diesel fuel is up 68 cents from a year ago.
Scott Horsley and PR News Washington. The gains and energy prices are linked to oil supplies from the Persian Gulf.
“The war has brought nearly all shipping there to a halt, and that means European and Asian”
countries could find their supplies of crude oil and natural gas very tight. That includes India, previously the Trump administration had sanctioned India to get it to stop buying crude oil from Russia. President Trump wanted to cut off funding for Russia's war in Ukraine. Now, energy secretary Chris Wright says the Trump administration is giving India approval
to purchase Russian oil for 30 days. We've reached out to our friends in India and said buy that oil, bring it into your refineries.
That pulls stored oil immediately into Indian refineries and releases the pressure on other
refineries around the world to buy oil that they're no longer competing with the Indians for in that marketplace, the Trump administration and India only results some of their trade differences a few weeks ago. As Israel and the U.S. continue the offensive in Iran, the World Health Organization says an estimated 100,000 people to flood Iran's capital, Tehran.
Some people have made their way overland to Turkey and bears reassure law reports. The people coming out to Iran look great-faced and pallet from the terror they've experienced this past week. They bring with them stories of airstrikes hitting close to their cars as they journeyed out of the country of intense bombardments in the cities that they've come from.
Many with stories of civilian casualties, saying these airstrikes are landing in dense residential neighbourhoods. There are also many people going back into Iran. Scared, of course, they say, to go back into a country at war, but with communications largely down, they need to know if their loved ones are safe.
“And going back is the only way to reach them.”
Ruth Jellock and Pyannus on the Turkish Iranian border. You're listening to NPR News from Washington. Officials in Cuba say power is slowly returning to Western parts of the island that were knocked off line this week. Cuba's power grid is fragile.
Now the Trump administration is blocking fuel to the country. We've been officials warn it could take days to fully restore power. The Pentagon is raising the stakes in its dispute with the Artificial Intelligence Company Anthropic. As NPR's John Brewitch reports, Anthropics CEO says the company has been designated a supply
chain risk to U.S. national security. Anthropics CEO Dario Amade says in a statement his company received a letter from the Pentagon declaring it a supply chain risk. Anthropic makes the popular AI chatbot clawed, and it's been in the dispute with the Department of Defense over how its AI models can be used.
Anthropic is uncomfortable with the Pentagon potentially being able to use its AI for mass surveillance of Americans and for fully autonomous weapons. The Pentagon has sought permission for all legal uses. According to Amade, the Pentagon's action has a narrow scope and the vast majority of Anthropics' clients are unaffected.
Amade says Anthropics does not believe the designation to be legal and has no choice but to challenge it in court. Although he says there have been productive discussions, John Ruich and PR news. A federal panel has delayed a vote on President Trump's new ballroom at the White House until April.
Trump tore down the east wing for the construction. There have been about 35,000 public comments submitted about the building and they're almost all negative. The panel heard testimony yesterday from 31 people, all but one, opposed the ballroom. I'm Core of a Coleman, NPR News.


