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    Iran price tag, Trump coin and ‘Bachelorette’ scrapped

     
    TODAY’S Iran WAR story

    Pentagon to request $200B for Iran war

    What happened
    President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth yesterday defended an upcoming funding request to pay for the ongoing Iran war, as Congress balked at the reported $200 billion price tag. The global cost of the conflict rose again yesterday as oil prices surged above $119 a barrel before settling at just under $109 after a chaotic day of trading. Qatar’s state energy company said Iranian retaliatory strikes on its Ras Laffan energy hub had cut its natural gas capacity by 17%, costing an estimated $20 billion in lost annual revenue and affecting deliveries to Europe and Asia. 

    Who said what
    “Obviously, it takes money to kill bad guys,” Hegseth told reporters yesterday. “As far as the $200 billion, I think that number could move.” Trump called the unspecified funding request “a small price to pay to make sure that we stay tippy-top,” pointing to the “vast amounts of ammunition” needed. It “was not immediately clear” how long the $200 billion was intended to last “or what operations it would cover,” The New York Times said. But the “significant sum” suggests that the Pentagon “is preparing for a significant engagement.”

    The funding request “met with stiff opposition” in Congress, Reuters said, “as Democrats and even some Republicans questioned the need for the money” after they “approved record funding for the military” over the past year. Republican leaders “do not believe they have the votes to fund the war even in their own party without far more detailed plans from the White House,” CNN said. 

    While some House Republicans “blanched” at the $200 billion price tag, others are “embracing the eye-popping number to help energize a stalled” effort to pass a second GOP-only reconciliation bill, Axios said. Senate Republicans are “decidedly cooler” on that plan. “The alternative — relying on a handful of Democrats to push it through the Senate — doesn’t look any more likely,” Politico said, as “energy prices rise and more Democratic lawmakers dig in against an unpopular war.”

    What next?
    The $200 billion funding fight “could turn into a referendum on the war in Congress,” Axios said, which could be harrowing for Republicans, “given the unpopularity of the war” and “the Pentagon’s existing $1 trillion budget.” Already, “anxiety is creeping up in the GOP,” CNN said, as the war drags on and energy prices soar ahead of this fall’s “critical election.”

     
     
    TODAY’S WHITE HOUSE story

    Trump board clears Treasury to mint Trump gold coin

    What happened
    President Donald Trump’s handpicked U.S. Commission on Fine Arts yesterday approved the final design for a 24-karat gold coin featuring his image, clearing the way for the U.S. Mint to begin production. The other federal commission required to give approval for currency designs, the bipartisan Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, last month refused to consider the Trump coin, citing foundational U.S. traditions and laws against putting living presidents on U.S. currencies.

    Who said what
    U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach said he was “thrilled to prepare coins that represent the enduring spirit of our country and democracy” as it turns 250, “and there is no profile more emblematic for the front of such coins” than Trump’s. The “unprecedented move marks yet another example of Trump and his allies circumventing conventional past presidential practices — and even the law — to get what he wants,” The Associated Press said. 

    At yesterday’s meeting, the fine arts commissioners mostly seemed concerned about whether Trump liked the design, based on a stern-faced portrait (pictured above), and how big to make the gold coin. “His preference” would be “the larger the better,” said Commissioner Chamberlain Harris, Trump’s White House executive assistant. Minting the limited-edition commemorative coin, and a $1 Trump coin for circulation that the administration is also planning, is “legally aggressive,” The New York Times said. The administration appears to be arguing that “a coin is different from currency,” and it’s “not clear whether anyone would have legal standing to challenge the matter in court.”

    What next?
    “This is what kings and dictators do, and there’s no getting around that,” said Donald Scarinci, chair of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee. “If the Mint makes these coins without the review of the CCAC, the coins are illegal,” but “we still fully expect them ​to plough ahead and mint both coins.” 

     
     
    TODAY’S CULTURE Story

    ABC pulls ‘Bachelorette’ over star’s leaked assault video

    What happened
    ABC yesterday canceled its ready-to-broadcast 22nd season of “The Bachelorette,” hours after TMZ posted a leaked video of this season’s star, Taylor Frankie Paul, attacking the father of one of her three children in 2023. The season premiere had been scheduled for Sunday. Paul, a breakout star of the Hulu series “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives,” is facing a separate domestic assault investigation involving the same former partner, Dakota Mortensen, police in Draper City, Utah, said earlier this week. 

    Who said what
    The new police investigation prompted Hulu — which, like ABC, is owned by Disney — to pause production of the fifth season of “Secret Lives.” ABC “had appeared to be committed to continuing its plans” to air “The Bachelorette,” The New York Times said. But the video of Paul kicking, hitting and throwing metal chairs at Mortensen in front of her 5-year-old daughter “rapidly shifted” the “calculus” for Disney, trumping the “significant financial hit” the company will take for pulling the season. 

    “The Bachelor” and its offshoots “are no stranger to controversy,” The Washington Post said, but this is the “first time an entire season of the show was canceled before it aired.” ABC had “heavily promoted” the show, “hyping the ‘Secret Lives’ tie-in” and counting on Paul’s 6 million TikTok followers to boost viewership. Unfortunately for the network, its “bet big on a Paul-fronted season” to reverse plummeting “ratings and cultural relevance” was “over before it started,” The Wall Street Journal said.

    What next?
    A Disney spokesperson said ABC will “not move forward with the new season of ‘The Bachelorette’ at this time” in light of the “newly released video.” It was “not immediately clear whether Paul’s ‘Bachelorette’ season would air at a later date,” the Journal said. 

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    The Quapaw Nation transformed 200 acres of toxic grassland in northeastern Oklahoma into an area where cattle graze and crops grow. The tribe is the first in the U.S. to “manage and carry out a Superfund cleanup,” said The Guardian. The Quapaw spent decades using mushroom compost to restore soil that had been contaminated by water runoff from a lead and zinc mine and clearing away toxic chat piles, returning the land to agricultural use.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Scientists chagrined at plan to launch space mirrors

    What if the sun never set? The California startup Reflect Orbital aims to set that in motion by launching thousands of mirrors into space. The company says the mirrors are a way of harnessing renewable energy. Detractors are worried about the environmental consequences.

    Reflect Orbital is “trying to build something that could replace fossil fuels and really power everything,” CEO Ben Nowack told The New York Times. The plan is to deliver a “spot of sunlight on demand with a constellation of in-space mirrors,” said Reflect Orbital’s website, allowing humanity to utilize the “solar energy that misses us.”

    The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is considering whether to permit Reflect Orbital to launch the mirror satellite. If the FCC allows it, the company would launch a prototype satellite “equipped with a 60-foot mirror,” said Futurism. Ultimately, Reflect Orbital’s goal is to deploy 50,000 mirror satellites in orbit around the Earth by 2035. 

    Manipulating sunlight has raised concerns among experts about the effect of light pollution on the environment and biodiversity. “The beam reflected by these satellites is very intense, four times brighter than the full moon,” John Barentine, an astronomer at the Silverado Hills Observatory and a consultant at Dark Sky Consulting, told Space.com. 

    The night sky is a “valued part of human heritage,” Robert Massey, the deputy executive director of the Royal Astronomical Society, told The Times of London. Space mirrors “would utterly destroy this and permanently scar the natural landscape. We hope the FCC wholeheartedly rejects the plans.”

     
     
    On this day

    March 20, 2016

    Barack Obama became the first president since the 1920s to visit Cuba, arriving on the island with his family. Obama’s visit came more than a year after his administration re-normalized relations with Cuba. Since then, relations between Washington and Havana have been on a downward slide.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Escalating war’

    “Trump’s Iran war frays ties with allies as oil prices surge,” The Wall Street Journal says on Friday’s front page. “Iran’s attacks on fuel facilities stoke fears of escalating war,” the Los Angeles Times says. “Trump tries to calm fears on oil prices,” The New York Times says. “Vance’s support for war could cost him politically,” The Washington Post says. “Influencers move from viral fame to seeking office,” the Austin American-Statesman says. “Legacy of Cesar Chavez imperiled” by “sex assault allegations,” USA Today says. “Mullin nomination on track” after clearing committee, says The Oklahoman. 

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Green energy

    More than 1,050 people wearing green ponchos gathered in Dublin, Ohio, on St. Patrick’s Day to break the Guinness World Record for the largest human shamrock. It was a “pretty magical way to celebrate the city’s Irish spirit,” said Scott Dring, CEO of Visit Dublin Ohio, to Marketing Communication News. The previous record of 815 people was set in Dublin, Ireland, in 2013. The American victory is unofficial until it is fully reviewed by Guinness World Records.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images; Maxine Wallace / The Washington Post via Getty Images; Highfive / Bauer-Griffin / GC Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images
     

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