Nottingham Forest are close to appointing former Wolves boss Vitor Pereira as their new head coach.
The Premier League club sacked Sean Dyche shortly after being held to a goalless draw by bottom club Wolves on Wednesday, leaving them three points above the relegation zone with 12 games remaining.
BBC Sport earlier reported Forest had opened talks with Pereira and those discussions are understood to have progressed with an agreement now described as close.
The 57-year-old quickly emerged as the preferred option to replace Dyche, having worked previously under Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis at Greek club Olympiacos.
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Pereira was credited for keeping Wolves in the Premier League last season having joined midway through the campaign, but he was sacked in November with the club on two points from 10 matches.
The Portuguese is in line to become Forest’s fourth manager of the season following Nuno Espirito Santo, Ange Postecoglou and Dyche.
A 32-year-old man was sent to prison for more than four years after pleading guilty to causing death by dangerous driving
The family of a woman killed in a crash on the Cambridgeshire border has paid tribute to her. Last week, Mantas Kudrevicius was sentenced to four years and six months in prison after a tragic crash in 2024.
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While driving towards Spalding on the A16 near Cowbit, Lincolnshire on August 30, 2024, Kudrevicius crossed into the opposite carriageway and crashed into a Renault Twingo. In the Renault was 28-year-old Shinead Francis.
Shinead died at the scene of the crash. Following Kudrevicius’s conviction, Shinead’s family has paid tribute to her.
In a statement, her family said: “On August 30, 2024 our lives changed forever, when our beautiful Shinead was taken from us in a collision. Her loss has left a vast emptiness in all of our lives.
“Shinead was one of those people who brought joy and happiness to all who met her. Whenever she walked into the room, her smile and zest for life lit up the room. In fact, that joy was just infectious to all around her.”
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Shinead was described as someone who was “always there for others” and a “confidant”. Her family added: “[She was] kind to others in their hour of need, huge hearted and a gentle soul, providing love to all around her. Her life had meaning and value.
“Her future was full of expectation and joy. She had plans to settle down and couldn’t wait for the day that she became a mother herself.
“She has achieved so much in her 28 years and had so much more to give. She was immensely proud of obtaining her HGV licence and referred to herself as a ‘Mother Trucker’.
“Her humour and sage advice supported all around her, guiding both friends and family through those dark periods that we must now all bear alone. We will miss her dancing, giggling, positivity, her physical presence and her sense of fun.
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“She had a love of penguins and had a collection of cuddly ones in her room – Christmas saw her place at the table taken by one of her cuddly penguins. When her grandmother required help at home, Shinead stepped in to provide that help.
“She did the shopping, tended the house and the garden and talked about her future plans to her grandmother. We will never forget our beautiful Shinead, the one who brought a breath of fresh air and a ray of sunshine to whomever she met.
“Everywhere is now a duller, less colourful place without her and the world has lost one of those who was an embodiment of all that was good. Rest peacefully Shinead, you remain deep inside our hearts and we will love you forever. Until we may all meet again.”
The Kiltonga Nature Reserve is to be restored as part of the plan
A controversial plan for a new housing estate beside the famous Duck Pond in Newtownards has been approved, after being deferred for a year amidst questions about residential plans on an industrial site.
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Elected members at the Ards and North Down Council March Planning Committee meeting this week (March 31) approved an application by Jona Developments for a residential development comprising 29 dwellings, that is 25 detached and four semidetached, at lands to the northwest of Kiltonga Industrial Estate, close to Belfast Road Newtownards. The site is close to the cherished Kiltonga Nature Reserve, known locally as the Duck Pond.
A year ago the plan was deferred after councillors questioned if local developers were engaged in a “ploy” to build residential housing estates on industrial zoned lands by introducing plans for nursing homes which would be then quickly dropped.
The matter was deferred for an extensive period for legal advice on the concerns raised by members including a former age-related condition and the implications of a former Planning Appeals Commission decision, as well as further information from Environmental Health on noise and smell issues that had been reported by residents.
Officers recommended the application for approval. In terms of letters of objection, the council received four, from three addresses. Objectors raised issues around limited parking, increase in traffic, flood risk, threats to flora and fauna and one said there was a threat to mental health of locals who would have green space taken away.
The Planning report states: “Biodiversity has been considered in the Ecological Survey which was submitted and reviewed by the Natural Environment Division. NED offered no objections to the proposal subject to the submission of a final Construction Environmental Management Plan and a Badger Mitigation Plan.
“While the application site currently appears as a green space to local residents, it is zoned for industry and is located within the Newtownards settlement limit where there is a presumption in favour of development on the site. “
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It adds: “DfI Rivers offered no objection to the proposal, subject to a condition relating to the submission of a final drainage assessment.”
It states: “A parking schedule has been provided which indicates that the in-curtilage parking provision along with additional spaces for visitors can all be provided within the application site. The parking provision is in accordance with the recommended guidelines as set out in the Parking Standards document. DfI Roads has considered the proposal and offers no objection to the proposal.”
There is an extensive history of planning applications at the site. In 2012 there was a successful application by Kiltonga Care Services for the erection of a residential nursing home and in 2019 there was a successful application by Will Hollinger Beltraine Developments Ltd at the site for 20 retirement bungalows.
Also in 2019 a condition on the 20 retirement bungalows – that none of the dwellings should be occupied until the adjacent residential nursing home was constructed and operational – was deleted after an appeal. None of these works were completed.
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A Planning Officer told the Committee on Wednesday: “Whilst the proposal is contrary to the (zoning) plan, the planning history represents a significant material consideration.”
She said: “The proposed plan adopts a landscape-led approach, including generous green buffers, and structured landscaping with a defined meadow area. There will be a spacious, low-density layout, with dwellings arranged around the existing pond, which will be retained and enhanced as part of the overall scheme.”
She added: “The principle of residential use has already been established on this site, and relevant planning history includes an approved and extant nursing home, with a certificate of lawfulness confirming commencement, approval for 20 retirement dwellings with commencement also certified.”
She said: “The pond is an established feature on this site and its inclusion is not considered to materially increase the risk beyond that typically associated with residential developments located near open water. In addition, the pond is not unique to this residential scheme.
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“The proposal is therefore considered acceptable from a safety perspective.” She said the zoning “was no longer variable for industrial use.”
She said: “Market evidence indicates that the proposed housing mix better reflects local housing needs, with the site being less suited to an age restricted scheme, given the limited access to services and facilities. Environmental Health has reassessed the application and raises no objection on noise or odour grounds subject to mitigations secured through conditions.
“The proposal secures ecological enhancement, including pond restoration to support the local population of legally protected species.”
He continued: “I have a suggestion. Number one, buy oil from the United States of America. We have plenty. We have so much, and number two, build up some delayed courage. Should have done it before. Should have done it with us as we asked, go to the strait and just take it, protect it, use it for yourselves.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin on Wednesday rescinded a rule that DHS expenditures over $100,000 be personally approved by his office, ending a widely criticized policy implemented by his predecessor Kristi Noem that critics said put a particular burden on the Federal Emergency Management Agency ’s work aiding disaster response and recovery.
The decision marks the first major action by the new Homeland Security leader, sworn in last week, to change a policy implemented by Noem, whom President Donald Trump fired in March.
Mullin’s move is expected to ease a spending bottleneck that lawmakers and states said delayed disaster response and recovery funds, though those impacts are unlikely to be widely felt until after the end of the DHS shutdown, now in its 47th day.
A DHS spokesperson confirmed that Mullin rescinded the rule Wednesday, telling The Associated Press the secretary “re-evaluated the contract processes to make sure DHS is serving the American taxpayer efficiently.” CBS News first reported Mullin’s decision.
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The spokesperson said Mullin’s action will streamline the contracting process and allocate aid more efficiently.
The International Association of Emergency Managers praised Mullin’s decision. “We appreciate Secretary Mullin’s common-sense approach to this matter, and we look forward to working with him,” said Josh Morton, president of IAEM-USA.
Noem issued a directive last June requiring that she personally approve any Department of Homeland Security expenditure over $100,000. Critics said the rule undermined FEMA in particular, an agency that routinely issues contracts and reimbursements well over that amount in its work preparing for and responding to natural and manmade disasters across the U.S.
The policy created “an untenable situation for emergency managers,” Morton said, and a bottleneck that also hindered mitigation and preparedness programs, “putting Americans at increased risk from disasters.”
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A recently released report by Democratic members of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee found the approval rule had delayed at least 1,000 FEMA contracts, grants or disaster reimbursements by September.
The policy came under scrutiny after news reports linked it to unstaffed call centers and delays deploying FEMA Urban Search and Rescue teams to Texas during deadly floods last July, and brought sharp rebuke from some state officials and lawmakers, especially Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, whose state is still recovering from devastation wrought by Hurricane Helene in 2024.
“You’ve failed at FEMA,” Tillis told Noem at a Senate hearing two days before she was fired.
About $2.2 billion in recovery and mitigation dollars were in the DHS approval queue Wednesday, according to FEMA data seen by the AP.
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“It’s got a great mission, and I think people at FEMA want to do their job,” Mullin told lawmakers at his March confirmation hearing, sparking cautious hope that he would ease the tumult experienced at the agency under Noem.
Mullin said he would keep the agency ”adequately staffed” after it lost over 2,400 employees last year, and said he was already considering nominees for a permanent FEMA administrator, which the agency still lacks.
Trump has repeatedly floated the idea of eliminating FEMA, saying as recently as Tuesday that the agency is “very expensive and it really doesn’t get the job done.”
Michael Coen, FEMA chief of staff during the Obama and Biden administrations, said, “Hopefully this a step toward transparency and stability between FEMA and states.”
Lifting the spending approval rule will not necessarily mean a rapid flow of FEMA reimbursements to states, tribes and territories, as the agency is still impacted by the DHS fund impasse, now the longest government shutdown in U.S. history.
While FEMA disaster response and recovery activities are paid out of a non-lapsing Disaster Relief Fund, that money is running low, a FEMA official warned lawmakers in a House hearing last week, with about $3.6 billion remaining. The DHS appropriations bill would add just over $26 billion to the fund.
A previous version of this story misstated that the DHS shutdown was in its 46th day, not its 47th, and that the Senate hearing where Tillis rebuked Noem took place one day before her firing, not two.
The police have made three arrests in the early hours following a manhunt after a man in his 20s was seriously injured in a daylight shooting that saw local schools put on lockdown
Three people have been arrested following a daylight shooting that left a man seriously injured.
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The incident took place in Bristol, causing local schools to lockdown as police launched a manhunt.
Avon and Somerset Police were called at 1.47pm on Wednesday, April 1 to a report that a gun had been fired at a car in Speedwell Road, which has been taped off near the Wackum pub and near the car wash crossroads.
The victim, a man in his 20s was taken to hospital with a serious injury.
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The police have issued a major update in the early hours as three people have been arrested in connection with the incident.
A man in his twenties was arrested just after 2.30am on suspicion of attempted murder, and another man and a woman in their twenties were arrested on suspicion of assisting an offender.
All three remain in police custody.
The force added that enquiries are continuing, however they are not looking for anyone else in connection with this incident at this time.
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St Anne’s Woods remains cordoned off as an area of interest and members of the public can expect to see a heightened police presence in this area and in the Speedwell area of Bristol.
A spokesperson for Avon and Somerset Police said: “We understand that this may have been a very concerning incident, but we have deployed a significant number of resources as part of our response, including the National Police Air Service helicopter, specially-trained firearms officers and drone units.
“We continue to appeal for anyone who witnessed the incident to come forward, including anyone with footage of the incident. If you can help, please call us.”
Passionate runner Martin Hull passed away in August last year after being diagnosed with lung cancer two weeks after he completed the Boston Marathon
21:52, 01 Apr 2026Updated 21:54, 01 Apr 2026
Five teams are set to take part in the Belfast Marathon this year in memory of a passionate runner who passed away shortly after being diagnosed with lung cancer.
Martin Hull was preparing to take part in the Boston Marathon last year when he started to feel unwell in the weeks leading up to the event. A passionate runner for many years who had completed more than a dozen marathons prior, he was still determined to take part in the event on Easter Monday and while he managed to complete it, it was a massive struggle.
Two weeks later after attending A&E, Martin received the devastating news that he had lung cancer. He and his family couldn’t understand how someone so fit, who had just trained for and completed a marathon, could develop the disease and sadly he would soon be told that it had spread throughout his body and was terminal.
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In the months that followed Martin maintained a postive attitude and encouraged his family to keep up their own running and training. Then on August 19 he passed away peacefully surrounded by his family.
One month later his daughter Megan completed the Belfast Half Marathon in his memory following the plan her dad had created for her.
His wife Lucy said: “Running was one of Martin’s greatest passions. He was a regular at parkrun, logged over 9,500km on Strava, and completed 13 marathons in his lifetime, including three Belfast City Marathons. He approached running the same way he approached everything in life—with dedication and determination. He researched the best trainers, planned the best routes, and took his pre- and post-run fuel very seriously (often pizza). As a family we travelled with him and cheered him on everywhere from Malaga to Loch Ness, but in recent years one race meant more than any other: the Boston Marathon.
“But the weeks before Boston weren’t easy. Martin began feeling unwell, especially when running, and made several visits to the GP as different pains appeared. Despite this, he refused to give up on the dream he had worked so hard for.
“Boston was bittersweet. The atmosphere was incredible, but Martin ran the entire race in intense pain. When we saw him at mile 25—normally too focused to even notice us—he stopped to talk, clearly struggling. Yet his determination carried him forward and he crossed the finish line in 04:52:08. We were incredibly proud, but deep down we knew something wasn’t right.
“Two weeks later our world changed. After a trip to A&E we were told Martin had a tumour in his lung. It was impossible to understand how someone so fit—someone who had just run a marathon—could have cancer. Over the following weeks we learned it had already spread to his lymph nodes, pancreas, spine and bowels. Soon after, we were given the devastating news that his illness was terminal.”
She continued: “Despite everything, Martin never lost hope or his faith in Christ. His diagnosis was ALK-positive lung cancer, a rare type that can affect young, healthy people. Medication gave us precious extra time together, and during that time he continued to encourage us—especially our running.
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“Martin passed away peacefully on 19 August with our family beside him. Four weeks later, his daughter Megan ran the Belfast Half Marathon following the plan he had made for her.
“This year we run in his memory. If you can, please support us by donating to help raise awareness, fund research, and support families affected by ALK-positive lung cancer. Martin never gave up—and neither will we.”
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Micklegate has been closed to motorists for almost a week after City of York Council said officials had discovered a void beneath the road surface close to the street’s junction with North Street.
The void, which is clear to observers passing by, has disrupted residents and business deliveries, which are being re-routed.
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Despite this, the council insists that the street is “very much open for business” throughout the Bank Holiday weekend, with Micklegate still accessible for pedestrians, mobility aid users and cyclists.
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Micklegate has been closed to motorists since Thursday (March 26) (Image: Newsquest)
Steve Wragg, the council’s head of highways asset management, said: “We aim to keep disruption to a minimum and are undertaking a thorough investigation of the void and what’s caused it, before we can decide on the best way to resolve it and then re-open the road.”
Nationwide has issued a crucial reminder about the ISA contribution deadline as major changes to the £20,000 allowance loom from April 2027
about Nationwide Building Society has issued an update concerning an approaching final deadline for savers. The latest statement follows an enquiry from a customer on social media.
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The customer raised an important question to the organisation about ISAs, asking: “What’s your deadline for the end of the tax year?” During each tax year, you can put up to £20,000 into tax-free ISAs, with the current allowance able to be split between cash ISAs or stocks and shares ISAs, according to your preference.
Responding to the enquiry, Nationwide pointed the customer towards a page on their website offering additional information about the ISAs they provide.
Nationwide was asked to clarify the cut-off date for customers to make deposits into their accounts using this year’s ISA allowance. The organisation stated: “For Nationwide (and all ISA providers), ISA contributions must be made by 5 April (by 11.59pm on 5 April), the final day of the tax year, for them to count toward that year’s allowance.
“This aligns with the HMRC ISA rules, which Nationwide adheres to. All ISAs and rates are accessible in branch, by phone or online, as we understand customers appreciate having options in how they bank, which is why we’ve extended our Branch Promise.”
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The Branch Promise represents Nationwide’s commitment to maintain all its 605 high street branches open until at least 2030. The organisation also provided some additional guidance about managing your savings, reports Wales Online.
Nationwide told the customer: “Customers can also check any online ISA or savings accounts on the app with rate and maturity dates all detailed there. Customers can also make use of our in‐app budgeting tool to help them manage their money.”
At present, the building society offers rates of up to 4.5 per cent on its ISA products, including both a five-year fixed term and a three-year fixed term, each providing 4.5 per cent. A major change to ISAs is on the horizon.
From April 2027, the current £20,000 annual allowance will effectively be reduced, meaning only £12,000 will be allowed for deposits into any form of ISA. The remaining £8,000 must be allocated to investment-based ISAs.
EXCLUSIVE: I Love LA is now ready to stream on HBO Max and it stars the daughter of a Hollywood icon.
Hayley Anderson Screen Time TV Reporter
22:32, 01 Apr 2026Updated 22:44, 01 Apr 2026
An I Love LA actress has revealed a surprising family connection between her father and one of her fellow cast members.
HBO Max has finally launched in the UK, bringing with it a wealth of acclaimed programmes, including I Love LA, a sitcom following Maia (played by Rachel Sennott) whose life descends into chaos when her influencer friend Tallulah (Odessa A’zion) makes an unexpected return.
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The cast is rounded out by Jordan Firstman, Gossip Girl‘s Leighton Meester, and actress True Whitaker, who portrays Maia and Tallulah’s close friend Alani Marcus.
Cinema enthusiasts may recognise Whitaker as the youngest daughter of acclaimed actor Forest Whitaker, renowned for his roles in The Last King of Scotland, The Butler and Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.
However, it was only upon arriving on the set of I Love LA that True discovered her father had a longstanding connection with one of her co-stars.
Speaking to Reach Plc, Whitaker revealed: “My dad in the show, Keith David, is a friend of my dad’s.
“When I was on set shooting the last episode, I Facetimed my dad being like ‘Hey, do you know this guy? This is my dad.’
“And he [Forest Whitaker] was like ‘Keith?!’ and Keith was like ‘Forest!’
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“And apparently my dad is the reason Keith moved to LA. They did Platoon together when they were in their 20s so it was kind of cute to see them reminisce.”
Also featuring Willem Dafoe and Charlie Sheen, the 1980s film Platoon chronicled the experiences of a young American volunteer confronting the brutal realities of the Vietnam War.
While Whitaker portrayed supporting character Big Harold, actor Keith David took on the role of seasoned soldier King.
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True also spoke of her renowned father’s delight at her securing a prominent part in I Love LA, having previously appeared in his drama Godfather of Harlem.
She said: “He’s extremely proud of me. Even his assistant pulled me aside and was talking to me and got emotional and was like ‘you have no idea.’
“My dad apparently had just been gloating to everybody and was stoked to see me in this light.
“And for me to be able to use my comedic skills, because obviously in the house I’m annoying and loud and funny but now I can actually utilise it.”
A weary President Donald Trump slurred his way through a disjointed national TV address Wednesday night in which he repeated the same justifications for his war with Iran that he’s been posting on social media throughout the month-long conflict.
The primetime speech, which pre-empted scheduled television programming on all broadcast networks at the request of the White House, had been billed as a major address in which Trump would finally lay out the justifications for the military action he started against Iran — one that would finally provide details on how and when the conflict would end to an American populace that has grown weary of it.
Instead, the president spent nearly 20 minutes speaking from a lectern in the White House’s main foyer, in prepared marks that often repeated, word for word, his Truth Social posts, and offered contradictory statements about the war, Iran and the now bogged down Strait of Hormuz, while repeatedly having trouble pronouncing words like “enemies,” “Venezuela” and “battlefield.”
Addressing both the cameras and an audience of cabinet members who’d been summoned to offer support — including Vice President JD Vance, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio — Trump began by claiming the joint U.S.-Israeli campaign, dubbed “Operation Epic Fury,” had “delivered swift, decisive, overwhelming victories on the battlefield, victories like few people have ever seen before” before repeating many of the same claims he has made about damage to Iran’s military capabilities for the last month in appearance after appearance.
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He bragged about Iran’s navy being “gone,” their Air Force “in ruins,” and crowed that “most” of the country’s leaders are “now dead” from decapitation strikes in the opening days of the war while claiming that Tehran’s ballistic missile capability has been “dramatically curtailed.”
In a 20-minute speech from the White House, President Donald Trump offered no new details to a nation wary of his reasoning for going to war with Iran. (AP)
“Never in the history of warfare has an enemy suffered such clear and devastating, large scale losses in a matter of weeks,” Trump said before claiming that the U.S. was “winning and now winning bigger than ever before” as a result of his decision to attack Iran in the midst of negotiations on Feb. 28.
He then pivoted to bragging about oil production in both the U.S. and Venezuela and claimed the country is now “totally independent of the Middle East.”
“We don’t have to be there. We don’t need their oil. We don’t need anything they have, but we’re there to help our allies,” he said.
The president’s rambling address took place just hours after a new CNN poll revealed that Americans have largely soured on the war, with just 34 percent of respondents voicing approval of it. The poll also found a super-majority of 66 percent of Americans disapproving of the war, with 43 percent of those reporting that they strongly disapprove.
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Trump proceeded to change subjects once more by launching into another series of grievances as justification for launching the war, including blatantly false claims about Iran’s alleged culpability for the 2000 bombing of the U.S.S. Cole for which al-Qaeda terrorists are preparing to go on trial before military commissions at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
He later returned to discussing present events by repeating his oft-used lines about America’s purported objectives of “crippling” Iran’s military capabilities and said he was “pleased” to say the “core strategic objectives are nearing completion.”
The president had trouble pronouncing numerous words during his rambling address to the nation (AP)
Without offering any evidence, he claimed that the families of the 13 American service members who’ve been killed since the start of the conflict had each asked him to “finish the job” while suggesting that failing to “complete the mission” would dishonor the fallen soldiers and airmen.
And inexplicably, he boasted that U.S. “has never been better prepared economically” to deal with the skyrocketing gasoline prices his war has caused while blaming the sky-high energy costs solely on Iran “launching deranged terror attacks against commercial oil tankers in neighboring countries that have nothing to do with the conflict.”
“We were a dead and crippled country after the last administration, and made it the hottest country anywhere in the world, by far with no inflation, record setting investments coming into the United States — over $18 trillion and the highest stock market ever, with 53 all time record highs in just one year. It all positioned us to get rid of a cancer that has long simmered. It’s known as the nuclear Iran, and they didn’t know what was coming,” he said.
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The president’s non sequitur on the U.S. economy and gas prices came as his advisers reportedly brace for oil prices to surge past the $150-a-barrel mark as the Iran war stretches into its second month and the Strait of Hormuz — a vital trade chokepoint through which 20 percent of the world’s oil flows — remains largely closed.
Because Iran has refused to allow most oil tankers passage through the key chokepoint, global oil supplies have been squeezed, leading to the massive price increases on the global oil market.
Yet Trump, seemingly ignorant of the interconnected nature of petroleum trading, appeared to dismiss the war’s effect on oil prices and claimed the U.S. is somehow immune from the effects of the war he started because of what he called his administration’s “drill baby drill” program.
“There’s no country like us anywhere in the world, and we’re in great shape for the future. The United States imports almost no oil through the Hormuz Strait and won’t be taking any in the future. We don’t need it. We haven’t needed it, and we don’t need it,” he said.
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The televised address as seen at the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, DC on April 1, 2026. (AFP via Getty Images)
He then appeared to repeat, verbatim a Truth Social post he’d made earlier this week in which he urged other nations to put their naval power towards forcing the strait to be reopened to maritime traffic.
“They must cherish it. They must grab it and cherish it. They can do it easily. We will be helpful, but they should take the lead in protecting the oil that they so desperately depend on,” he said.
“So to those countries that can’t get fuel, many of which refuse to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, I have a suggestion: Number one, buy oil from the United States of America. We have plenty. We have so much. And number two: Build up some delayed courage … go to the Strait and just take it, protect it, use it for yourselves. Iran has been essentially decimated. The hard part is done, so it should be easy,”
Trump added that when the conflict ends, the disputed waterway would “open up naturally” and predicted that the economic damage from the war he started would reverse itself.
“It will resume the flowing and the gas prices will rapidly come back down. Stock prices will rapidly go back up … our economy is strong and improving by the day, and it will soon be roaring back like never before. It will top the levels that it was a month ago,” he said.
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His remarks were no different from anything he’s offered over myriad public appearances since the start of the war, despite hopes that he would provide a timeline for winding down the unpopular military operation.
Instead, he claimed the war would continue for “the next two or three weeks” while U.S. forces “bring [Iran] back to the Stone Age where they belong” and threatened indiscriminate attacks on Tehran’s electrical generation capacity — something that would be a war crime under U.S. law.
“We are going to hit each and every one of their electric generating plants very hard and probably simultaneously, we have not hit their oil, even though that’s the easiest target of all, because it would not give them even a small chance of survival or rebuilding. But we could hit it and it would be gone. And there’s not a thing they could do about it,” he said.
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