NPR News Now
NPR News Now

NPR News: 04-03-2026 11PM EDT

2h ago4:40747 words
0:000:00

NPR News: 04-03-2026 11PM EDTTo 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 yo...

Transcript

EN

Live from NPR news in Washington, I'm Dan Ronin.

Two U.S. Air Force combat planes were shot down today, that's according to an official not authorized to discuss the incident.

A plane went down near the straight-of-horn moves that had one crew member who has been rescued

by U.S. forces. One crew member has been rescued from the other plane in southwestern Iran, but the search

continues for the second crew member, NPR's Jeff Brumfield reports.

One crew member of the two-seater jet has been rescued, according to a U.S. official who is not authorized to discuss the situation, U.S. forces continue to search for the second crew member. Iranian state media has posted photos of debris along with what looks like an empty ejection seat.

Numerous videos on social media show what appear to be American helicopters and planes flying low over southwestern Iran. Two videos verified by NPR showed rescue aircraft deep inside the country, around 150 miles from its border with Iraq, Jeff Brumfield and P.R. News.

President Trump is expected to sign in order to pay all DHS employees as Congress remains

deadlocked over funding that agency, NPR's Windsor Johnson reports it adds uncertainty to airport security lines over the weekend. Airline analysts say wait times have improved since Trump took executive action to begin paying TSA agents after more than a month. But the recovery is uneven, hundreds of officers resigned during the partial shutdown and

it can take months to train replacements. Airline analysts Henry Hartfeld says that uncertainty could quickly affect operations. This is a day-to-day situation, if the back pay isn't fully repaid, and if the TSA workers are concerned that they won't be paid for what they do now, that we're going to start seeing absenteeism increasingly.

That can lead to inconsistent staffing levels at airports making wait times harder to predict. Windsor Johnson and P.R. News, Washington.

A group of roughly 2,000 states filed a lawsuit today to block President Trump's latest

executive order on voting NPR's Miles Parks reports.

This suit, filed by a group of Democratic states, is the third to be filed challenging

the executive order after the Democratic Party's suit on Wednesday and a coalition of voting rights groups suit on Thursday. The Constitution is explicit in delegating power to run voting to the states, although Congress can't step in, to set national rules for federal elections as well. In a statement, New York Attorney General, Latisha James referenced all that, saying quote,

"no president has the power to rewrite the rules on his own." Numerous legal experts say they expect courts to swiftly block this order, as they did with Trump's order last March, which tried to add new restrictions to voter registration. Miles Parks and P.R. News, Washington. Wall Street had the day off Friday for the good Friday holiday.

The markets will reopen on Monday, and, from Washington, you're listening to NPR News. The U.S. economy added 178,000 jobs in the month of March as stronger than expected number than most economists had been expecting. The nation's unemployment rate declined 1/10 to 4.3%. The health care sector was responsible for a large portion of the job growth.

That area of the economy added 76,000 new positions. Construction added 7, I should say, 26,000 new jobs, transportation and warehouse posted a gain of 21,000 jobs. The Artemis two astronauts are more now than 130,000 miles away from Earth heading towards

the Moon for the first lunar flyover in five decades.

NPR's NL Greenfield Voice reports that it was an action pack couple of days. Now their work schedule was a little less hectic. With the Orion spacecraft now on the trajectory that will take it around the Moon and back, the crew has more time to rest. The four astronauts finally got to talk to their families back on the ground, and they've

been taking pictures. Howard Hugh is the Orion Program Manager at NASA. He says his favorite photo so far shows the inside of the spacecraft and one of its windows. It's just awesome to see from our spaceship. Out the window, our beautiful home planet, there Earth.

The astronauts have plenty of cameras on board, so there's more pictures to come, especially during their closest approach to the Moon on Monday. NL Greenfield Voice NPR News South Carolina has defeated the defending NCAA Women's Champ Yukon at the tournament. This is NPR News from Washington.

Support for NPR.

Compare and Explore