President Trump announced Sunday that the U.S. Navy will begin "Project Freedom" on Monday to guide and free foreign ships trapped in the Strait of Hormuz amid the ongoing Iran standoff. The operation will include guided-missile destroyers, over 100 land and sea-based aircraft, unmanned platforms, and 15,000 service members. Trump warned that any interference with the humanitarian operation "will be dealt with forcefully."
Gov. Ron DeSantis signed redistricted Florida congressional maps Monday that give Republicans a 24-4 advantage over Democrats heading into the 2026 midterms. The new maps specifically endanger the seats of Democratic Reps. Darren Soto, Kathy Castor, Jared Moskowitz, and Debbie Wasserman Schultz. DeSantis argued Florida was "shortchanged in the 2020 Census" and has since added 1.5 million more registered Republicans than Democrats.
Oil prices have surged past $126 per barrel — their highest since the Iran war began in February — and the national average for regular unleaded has climbed past $4.30 a gallon. The spike comes just nine days after the Energy Secretary claimed prices had "likely peaked." Rising energy costs are emerging as a major political headache for Republicans ahead of the midterms.
In his final press conference as Fed Chair, Jerome Powell announced he will remain on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors after his chairmanship expires May 15, rather than vacating his seat entirely. The move blocks Trump from filling the seat and irks the White House, which has nominated former Fed official Kevin Warsh to succeed Powell as chair. Powell's underlying governor term runs through 2028.
Iran's Ali Abdollahi declared that "any foreign armed forces, especially the aggressive U.S. Army, will be attacked if they intend to approach and enter the Strait of Hormuz," directly threatening Monday's planned Project Freedom escort mission. CENTCOM has already eliminated six Iranian small boats that attempted to interfere with commercial shipping. The standoff marks the most dangerous phase of the confrontation since hostilities began February 28.
May Day demonstrations across multiple continents escalated into clashes as traditional labor protests became vehicles for anti-war and anti-Israel political movements. In Madrid, thousands marched under banners reading "Capitalism should pay the cost of their war," while placards targeting Trump and Netanyahu were prominent throughout Europe. Nearly 500 organizations in the U.S. held over 750 events under a "Workers Over Billionaires" banner.
China set its 2026 GDP growth target at 4.5–5%, the lowest since 1991, and analysts now warn the Iran war may push actual growth even lower. Surging global oil prices and disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz are hammering China's energy-dependent manufacturing sector. A think tank estimated China's real growth in 2025 was already below 3% — half the official target.
The White House terminated every member of the National Science Board, the independent body created in 1950 to guide the National Science Foundation. Board members — scientists and engineers from universities and industry — received letters Friday from the Presidential Personnel Office informing them of immediate dismissal. Supporters call it a necessary move against politicized science; critics warn it threatens federal research independence.
The U.S. Space Force awarded Seattle-based Gravitics a $60 million contract to develop an orbital carrier capable of pre-positioning and rapidly deploying maneuverable space vehicles on demand. CEO Colin Doughan says the system "bypasses traditional launch constraints," enabling operators to select deployment orbits without waiting for dedicated rocket launches. The platform is designed to counter growing orbital threats from China and Russia.
Stephen Colbert's "Late Show" will air its final episode on May 21 after a decade-long run, with CBS replacing the 11:35 PM slot with Byron Allen's "Comics Unleashed" — a family-friendly, apolitical comedy show — starting May 22. The cancellation, which CBS called "purely a financial decision" after $40 million in annual losses, has Colbert pivoting to co-writing a "Lord of the Rings" film and publicly mulling a run for office.