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NPR News: 05-07-2026 1PM EDT

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The Trump administration is waiting me here if Iran accepts its conditions fo...

President Trump has demanded that a deal must include Iran's agreement to halt Iranian enrichment and fully reopen the state of Hormuz, where hundreds of ships and thousands of mariners from around the world are stranded.

Shipping data firm Lloyd's list intelligence at today, that Iran has created an agency to approve transit and collect tolls from shipping in the key global trade route.

World-world prices are now hovering around $100 a barrel. Down slightly, U.S. gas prices still surging due to a combination of factors. The war as well as seasonal demand, which is a few weeks after the start of summer, driving season.

National average we see is now around $4.56. Even if the U.S. and Iran agree to end the war, economists warn it could take some time for the price of gasoline and other goods to come down.

Here's NPR's Windsor Johnston. As energy costs rise, so do the prices of many products people use every day. Supply chain expert Jason Miller says items made with plastic chemicals or industrial materials are especially vulnerable. Think about a Canada WD40. Your paints, any type of chemicals, soaps and things of that sort will be more expensive now. Any type of plastic product. So if you know you look around your house, you may have some plastic storage things of that sort. Miller says the impact is showing up far beyond fuel prices, because many global household goods depend on petroleum-based materials and global shipping networks that remain under strain.

Windsor Johnston and PR News, Washington.

NPR has learned the campaign staffers have bet on their own candidates and made thousands of dollars on prediction markets.

In this exclusive report NPR's Lou Garrett tells us these staffers use inside campaign information to bet with an edge and win big. Two campaign staffers granted anonymity for fear of retribution said the method is simple. The campaign staffers would get an unreleased poll. Use it to buy advantageous event contracts and then sell their contracts once the poll was released and their contract price soared. One staffer admitted to doing this themselves. They won thousands and their bet was verified by prediction market data reviewed by NPR.

Current law bars prediction market betters from using insider information to make money. But former commissioner at the Commodities Future Trading Commission, Kristen Johnson, doubted that the agency could police quote election positions. These bets raised serious questions about how campaign operatives can turn private information into a quick payday amid an unsettled legal landscape for prediction markets. Lou Garrett and PR News, Washington. This is NPR News.

President Trump's meeting with Brazilians and President Luis Nasiolulu of the Silva is at the White House.

Their agenda was expected to include access to critical minerals as well as US tariffs on Brazilian goods.

A new survey shows 36% of LGBTQ+ youth considered attempting suicide in the past year. One in ten attempted to take her own life. The findings are from the nonprofit Trevor Project. And Piers Ritu Chatterjeeb has more. Youth age 13 to 17 were more likely to consider an attempt suicide than all the youth. More than two-thirds of respondents had that experience recent symptoms of anxiety.

57% reported experiencing depression. More than eight in ten respondents wanted mental health care, but 44% of those youth were unable to access that care. Nearly half of LGBTQ+ youth reported experiencing discrimination due to their gender identity or sexual orientation. But the vast majority said they have at least one caring adult that's called supportive of their identity. And youth who live in supportive communities are far less likely to attempt suicide compared to those in unsupportive communities.

Ritu Chatterjeeb and PR News. Justice Clarence Thomas was the first baby boomer on the US Supreme Court after serving more than 34 years as of today. The conservative is the second longest serving justice ever surpassed only by liberal William O. Douglas, who spent more than 36 years as a Supreme Court justice. I'm Lakshmi Singh and PR News in Washington.

Iran, Lebanon, Israel, Gaza, with conflict unfolding in so many places.

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