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What did Iran's new Supreme Leader say after his father's death?
Live from NPR News, I'm Lakshmi Singh. Iran's new Supreme Leader, Mustafa Khamenei, is making his first public statement since his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed on the first day of the U.S.-Israel war against Iran. The younger Khamenei vows to avenge, quote, martyrs, to continue attacks on U.S.
bases in the region, and to keep its blockade on the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global route for oil shipments. NPR's Greg Myrie says Iranian state media ran Khamenei's statement. We didn't see the new leader, Moshe Bahamaneh, and we didn't hear his voice. This statement was read on Iranian state media in his name. So one of the key questions is what condition is he in?
He was believed to be injured in the Israeli airstrike on day one of the war that killed the former supreme leader, his father, as well as his mother, his wife, and his son. NPR's Greg Myhre reporting. Oil prices spiked overnight as gas prices in the U.S. become a political headache for President Trump. NPR's Tamara Keith reports it's an economic indicator people track closely.
Trump campaigned on bringing down gas prices, but since launching the war with Iran, they are way up. Jared Bernstein was on President Biden's Council of Economic Advisors. I mean, this is a price you see twice a block when you're driving down the street. And every time you fill up your tank, you recognize how much more it costs.
If this conflict drags on, the cost of fuel could drive up other prices, too, says Stephen Moore, a conservative economist. Part of the problem for President Trump is that we already had people complaining about prices. Affordability was shaping up to be a top issue in this year's midterms, even before the gas price spike. Tamara Keith, NPR News.
An internal government watchdog and members of Congress are separately investigating new allegations Department of Government Efficiency staffers potentially misuse sensitive Social Security data. Here's NPR's Stephen Fowler.
In a letter obtained by NPR, the Social Security Administration's inspector general told members of Congress last week it received an anonymous complaint about, quote, potential misuse of SSA data. This week, congressional Democrats investigating Doge's access to Social Security data also said they received new whistleblower information.
That information, which was reported by the Washington Post and has not been independently reviewed by NPR, alleges a former Doge staffer retained copies of two Social Security databases and wanted to use them in a private sector job. The Social Security Administration disputes the claims. Stephen Fowler, NPR News. U.S. stocks are trading lower this hour.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average down 526 points or more than 1% at 46,890. From Washington, this is NPR News. Veteran Congressman Jim Clyburn, one of the top-ranking Democrats in the U.S. House, is seeking an 18th term. He ended speculation today in announcing plans to run for reelection in South Carolina's 6th District. He is an influential figure in politics.
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