Iran war, reading scores, Fukushima

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By Siddharth Karthikeyan

March 11, 2026

By Siddharth Karthikeyan

March 11, 2026

 
 

In the news today: Republicans and Trump highlight different priorities for midterms campaigning; what victory might look like for Iran and the United States with no immediate end to the war in sight; and a new report suggests broader societal shifts might be at play in young kids’ declining reading scores in the U.S. Also, an innkeeper’s efforts to record radiation levels fifteen years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

 
AP Morning Wire

President Donald Trump gestures as Rep. Tom Emmer, R-Minn., and House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., applaud at the Republican Members Issues Conference, Monday in Doral, Fla. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein) 

POLITICS

Trump has one prescription for midterms. House Republicans have another

President Donald Trump insisted he had the answer for Republicans anxious about losing their congressional majority this year: build on an already strict national voter identification law to ban mail ballots and restrict transgender rights. Less than 24 hours later, House Republican leaders highlighted their priorities. And the voting bill isn't high on the list. Read more.

Why this matters:

  • Just a few seats shy of losing their majority, senior Republicans are eager to emphasize the party’s work to lower costs, none of which is easy to accomplish with only a few votes to spare, while Trump is often focused elsewhere. The war he initiated in Iran has disrupted the party's message on affordability.  

  • In an effort to gain leverage over lawmakers, including some Republicans, Trump said he won't sign other legislation into law until the voting bill is passed. The bill is rooted in his insistence that he won the 2020 presidential election, claims rejected by dozens of courts and his own attorney general at the time. The dynamic isn't any easier in the Senate, where Republicans are struggling to pass the measure without Democratic support.

  • Faced with a tough political calculus, House Speaker Mike Johnson is trying to shift focus to Democrats, in particular over the shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, which has prompted security lines to swell at some airports over the past few days.

RELATED COVERAGE ➤

  • Trump-backed Fuller and Democrat Harris move to Georgia runoff to succeed Marjorie Taylor Greene

  • Longtime US Rep. Bennie Thompson defeats young Democratic challenger in Mississippi primary

  • Trump to visit Ohio and Kentucky to downplay war's effect on economy and target a top GOP antagonist

  • Thune says Senate to consider voting bill but pushes back on demands for 'talking filibuster'

  • Inflation likely to spike in coming months after tame February reading

  • As another shutdown impacts travelers, some see eliminating TSA agents as a solution

  • Judge denies restraining order for conservative media figures who sought press passes

  • Justice Department official Ed Martin accused of ethics violations for letter to Georgetown dean

  • Judge urges states to settle Live Nation claims after US strikes deal but states say no chance

  • Judge to decide if Penn must produce records in probe of antisemitism at Ivy League school

 

ANALYSIS

Iran war becomes a contest of who can take the most pain

The war with Iran, for all its complexity and global effects, boils down to a single question: Who can take the pain the longest? A surge in oil prices points to what may be Iran’s most effective weapon and the United States’ biggest vulnerability in continuing the campaign: Damaging the world economy. Read more.

Why this matters:

  • There’s no immediate end to the war in sight — nor in the rhetoric coming from both America and Iran. For Iran's rulers, victory means surviving the campaign still in power, no matter the costs to the country and the region.

  • Trump has been vague and contradictory about his aims in the war. At times, he seems to push for overthrowing Iran's theocracy; other times, he seems to be willing to stop short of that, saying broadly that he wants to ensure Iran is no longer a threat to Israel, the region and the U.S. That could give him flexibility in declaring that victory has been achieved.

  • The pressure is on U.S. allies as well. Gulf Arab states, while still not combatants in the war, face seemingly unending and occasionally fatal Iranian fire targeting oil fields, cities and critical water works. And Israel, while boasting of inflicting heavy damage on Iran’s missile program and other military targets, continues to be targeted by increasingly sophisticated Iranian missiles.

RELATED COVERAGE ➤

  • Iran targets commercial ships, Dubai airport and oil facilities as concerns grow over global energy

  • Lebanon’s latest conflict brings rare public backlash against Hezbollah as war flares again

  • Most of Iranian women’s soccer team left Australia after declining last-minute airport asylum offers

 

EDUCATION

Young kids missed the pandemic’s school disruptions. Their reading scores are still behind

Young students are still struggling to bounce back academically from the pandemic, even though many were babies at the time. In new data from research and testing group NWEA, first and second graders are scoring below kids pre-pandemic in math and reading. Read more.

Why this matters:

  • Researchers say the problem looks bigger than impacts from the pandemic. They point to emerging data that suggest parents are reading less to kids. Testing for younger kids is less common, so the report offers insights into the depth of the academic disruption.

  • The federal government gave billions of dollars to school districts to help students catch up — with mixed results. In 2024, reading scores for fourth and eighth graders continued a downward slide, according to the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Math scores, however, trended upward. 

  • Schools are beginning to make concessions to accommodate students with weaker literacy skills and short attention spans. Many teachers no longer assign books to their students.

RELATED COVERAGE ➤

  • Preparing to study abroad requires knowing what might go wrong during and after the trip

  • A Senegal boarding school that drew students from the US is at the center of an abuse investigation

 

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