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By Amy Langfield

March 10, 2026

By Amy Langfield

March 10, 2026

 
 

Good afternoon and welcome to your afternoon news update from AP. Today, recent polls show Americans are divided along party lines on U.S. military action against Iran; the Wyoming governor signs a ban on abortions after about 6 weeks but said he has misgivings; and a major sewage spill in the Potomac River highlights the severe consequences of old, failing infrastructure.

 

UP FIRST

AP Morning Wire

A boy runs inside a cement pipe turned into a bomb shelter as air raid sirens warn of incoming Iranian missile strike in Michmoret, Israel, on Tuesday. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

What Americans think about the war in Iran, according to recent polls

Americans are divided along party lines on U.S. military action against Iran, according to polls conducted since the war began, with most polls showing opposition is higher than support. Polls suggest that many Americans are worried the military action is making the U.S. “less safe,” even as they see Iran as a threat to U.S. security. There are also warning signs for President Donald Trump as he confronts the possibility of a prolonged conflict that could come with significant economic turmoil. Read more.

RELATED COVERAGE ➤

  • Live updates: About 140 US troops wounded in Iran war, 8 severely, Pentagon says
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  • State Department allows up to $40M to be used for evacuation flights for Americans in Mideast
  • Here are the Iran war’s biggest unknowns, from Tehran’s new leader to oil prices 
  • Israel says Iran is using cluster munitions. What to know about the weapons
  • State Department orders drawdown at more Mideast diplomatic missions
 

TOP STORIES

Wyoming governor signs ban on abortions after about 6 weeks but cites misgivings

Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon on Monday signed a ban on abortions after embryonic cardiac activity can be detected, generally at about six weeks’ gestation and often before women know they’re pregnant. The signing makes Wyoming the fifth state to bar abortions at that stage of pregnancy, along with Florida, Georgia, Iowa and South Carolina. Thirteen other states bar abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with some exceptions. Gordon, a Republican, said in a letter to lawmakers that he has some misgivings about the law he signed because it does not include exceptions for pregnancies caused by rape or incest. Read more.

RELATED COVERAGE ➤

  • Rep. Kevin Kiley says he's leaving the Republican Party and will serve as an independent
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  • Federal judges decline to extend appointment for interim US attorney in Milwaukee
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  • Former Missouri House speaker sentenced to prison for COVID relief fraud
  • Alabama governor commutes death sentence of inmate whose accomplice fired fatal shot
  • Mississippi jury acquits engineer accused of lying about 2017 military plane crash
  • Alexander Butterfield, the Nixon aide who disclosed Watergate tapes, dies at 99
  • A sweeping biography of Robert McNamara wins $50,000 book prize
  • Former NYC mayor Michael Bloomberg tops Philanthropy 50 list for third year in a row

Beyond the Potomac River, sewage spills threaten cities with old infrastructure and little funds

The January collapse of a pipe as wide as a car dumped so much sewage into the Potomac River that officials tracked a spike of gut-wrenching bacteria drifting slowly past Washington for weeks, prompting an emergency declaration and federal assistance. It was a disaster of historic scale — 244 million gallons spilled — spotlighting the severe consequences of old, failing infrastructure. But smaller sewer overflows that draw far less notice are common. Tens of thousands occur every year across the U.S., contaminating rivers, flooding streets and sometimes causing backups into homes that threaten human health. Read more.

RELATED COVERAGE ➤

  • A Virginia boater is suing a Washington utility for the Potomac River sewage spill
 

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IN OTHER NEWS

A car rides past students sitting outside the University of Havana during a protest over an energy crisis that has disrupted classes in Havana, Cuba, Monday. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)

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S.S. Central America: