The Headlines

Inside an Ebola Ward, and a Roadblock for Trump’s $1.8 Billion Fund

10 min
Jun 1, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

The Headlines covers three major stories: the deteriorating conditions in an Ebola ward in the Democratic Republic of Congo where healthcare workers lack basic protection, a federal judge blocking Trump's controversial $1.8 billion government compensation fund pending further investigation, and ongoing military exchanges between the U.S. and Iran amid peace negotiations.

Insights
  • International aid response to the Ebola outbreak is falling behind the curve and may be insufficient to contain the third-largest outbreak on record
  • Healthcare workers in resource-limited settings face extreme occupational hazard when treating infectious diseases without adequate protective equipment
  • Government settlement agreements can face judicial scrutiny when they appear to involve quid pro quo arrangements between parties with conflicting interests
  • YouTube creators are successfully transitioning to mainstream film production and attracting younger audiences that traditional Hollywood has struggled to reach
Trends
Inadequate international coordination and resource allocation in pandemic response systemsJudicial oversight of executive branch spending and settlement agreements increasingEscalating military tensions in the Middle East despite ongoing diplomatic negotiationsYouTube-to-Hollywood pipeline emerging as viable path for young content creatorsWater infrastructure vulnerability to natural disasters in island communitiesYouth audience engagement through internet-native horror content
Topics
Ebola outbreak in Democratic Republic of CongoHealthcare worker safety and occupational hazardsTrump's $1.8 billion compensation fundFederal court oversight of government settlementsU.S.-Iran military conflict and peace negotiationsStrait of Hormuz shipping securityHawaii earthquake and water crisisKona coffee production challengesYouTube creators in mainstream filmHorror film box office performance
Companies
New York Times
News organization producing the podcast and employing correspondents reporting on major stories
Mungwalu General Hospital
Healthcare facility in Democratic Republic of Congo where Ebola ward conditions were documented
People
Declan Walsh
Reported from Democratic Republic of Congo on Ebola outbreak conditions and hospital challenges
Tracy Mumford
Hosted The Headlines podcast episode covering major news stories
Kane Parsons
20-year-old YouTube creator who directed Backrooms film, youngest director with number one movie
David Farenthold
Mentioned as upcoming guest on The Daily discussing Trump's renovation plans for Washington D.C.
Quotes
"When you put the right things together, boom! Great things happen."
Cambridge Building Society advertisementOpening
"Here we are in Mangualu in the town where the epidemic started, where there are the highest number of cases. And yet this is the best we can do."
Congolese doctorEbola segment
"No administration has the authority to spend public money through a political rewards program that Congress never authorized."
Legal nonprofit representativeTrump fund segment
"She wanted to look into whether Trump had effectively settled with his own government out of court to avoid judicial scrutiny."
Tracy MumfordTrump fund segment
Full Transcript
When you put the right things together, boom! Great things happen. It's like having a chat with the Cambridge Building Society. You'll always find us in Tune with You. The Cambridge Building Society. For the mortgages and savings, we can work it out. From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today is Monday, June 1. Here's what we're covering. When I walked into the Ebola Ward in Mungwalu General Hospital, the first thing that struck me was how many people were walking around without any form of protection. A handful of people were wearing rubber gloves. Some of them had pulled a scarf or part of their sweater across their mouths. But for the most part, people were wearing nothing. And that meant that they were at great risk of catching the virus that causes Ebola themselves. Declan Walsh is the Times' Chief Africa correspondent. He's been on the ground in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the Ebola outbreak has now ballooned to the third largest on record, and where hospitals are struggling to keep up. In that small ward that we visited, we found a five-year-old boy who had just come in the night before with incessant bleeding from his nose. He was lying on the bed with the tissue stuffed into his nose to staunch the bleeding with his dad watching over him. But just two beds away from that boy lay the body of a 21-year-old woman who had died during the night, and her remains had still not been removed. Now the bodies of people who have just died from Ebola are incredibly infectious, yet it was just covered by a thin sheet that had been pulled over. That only added to that sense of danger inside that treatment facility. And in fact, people were being infected at the hospital because when we went into the next ward, we found the lab technician who himself had gotten apparently infected with Ebola as part of his job taking samples from other people. And we later learned that seven other staff members from that hospital had already died from the virus. That was just a sign of how bad conditions were. I was brought around the ward by a young Congolese doctor. He told me he was angry. He was angry at his own government, which had taken so long to detect this outbreak. But he was also more broadly angry at the international response system towards Ebola. He turned around to me at one point and he said, here we are in Mangualu in the town where the epidemic started, where there are the highest number of cases. And yet this is the best we can do. Now it's important to say that there is aid coming into this area. In the capital, Bunya, where I'm currently speaking from, you know, there is an airport where planes are coming in, bringing supplies, much-needed supplies. There are other treatment centers being set up as well. But we don't really know if these facilities are going to be enough because the aid effort is so far behind the curve, it's not even keeping pace with this outbreak as of now. At a federal court in Virginia, a judge has blocked the government from launching President Trump's controversial $1.8 billion fund. The pot of money is intended to pay people the administration claims were harmed by the government. But as soon as it was announced, critics blasted it as a slush fund for Trump's allies and warned that it could be used to give payouts to January 6th rioters, among others. The judge said that for now, no money can be dispersed, at least until she holds a hearing later this month about one of several lawsuits challenging the fund. The head of a legal nonprofit involved in the case celebrated the temporary pause, saying, quote, no administration has the authority to spend public money through a political rewards program that Congress never authorized. The fund was announced last month as part of a remarkable deal Trump struck to end a case he had filed against the federal government. Trump had sued the IRS over a leak of his tax returns, but then abruptly dropped the case as the Justice Department announced the $1.8 billion fund and a provision giving Trump and his family immunity from any ongoing tax audits. Now though, the judge overseeing the tax return suit has ordered that case reopened, saying she wants to investigate what she called grievous allegations that the hasty deal was premised on deception. She said she wanted to look into whether Trump had effectively settled with his own government out of court to, quote, avoid judicial scrutiny. The White House did not immediately respond to questions from the Times, but a spokeswoman for the Justice Department has defended Trump's original decision to drop the case, calling it a routine move and saying there was, quote, nothing improper about this agreement. Now, a few quick updates on the war in Iran. First, the U.S. military says it's hit more targets inside Iran, the latest in a series of attacks over the past week. In a statement, U.S. Central Command described the strikes as self-defense and said it was responding to aggressive Iranian actions, including the downing of an American military drone. Shortly after the U.S. announcement, Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps said it had also carried out strikes, targeting a base used by U.S. forces. The fresh exchange comes even as negotiations to end the war are ongoing. On Friday, Trump met with his top aides in the Situation Room for two hours to discuss the peace talks. An official say the president has now sent Iran a new set of terms for a potential framework to stop the conflict. And in the Strait of Hormuz, the Times has learned that the U.S. military has been quietly guiding some ships through the waterway. According to an American official, the U.S. has coordinated the passage of about 70 commercial ships into and out of the Strait in the past three weeks. That has allowed some ships which can't or don't want to get Iranian permission or pay an Iranian toll to move through the area. Still, Iran continues to exert significant control over the Strait before the war, more than 100 ships a day pass through the waterway. About 10 days ago in Hawaii, a 6.0 magnitude earthquake hit the Big Island and set off what has now become a water crisis. They've felt earthquakes before, but this one in particular really stood out. In the Kona region, many people rely on rainwater for drinking, irrigation, and more. And the quake destroyed hundreds of water tanks where people were holding their supplies. Some residents are now trekking to a local public spigot to fill up five gallon jugs, and authorities have started trucking in some water to try and help. The owner of one company that sells rainwater catchment systems said he'd gotten 200 calls and was flying in extra staff to try and keep up with demand. The water shortage has created a particular problem for one of Kona's most famous exports, coffee. It's some of the most coveted coffee in the world, but with no easy way to water the crop right now, many of the small family-run farms there are struggling. And finally, the horror movie Backrooms pulled in an astonishing $82 million at the North American box office this weekend. And it is basically proving that YouTube's success can translate to a Hollywood hit. Backrooms was born on the internet. It was inspired by a photo that's been going around on message boards for years of a creepy, empty, yellow room. The film's director, Kane Parsons, had made horror content on YouTube riffing on it, and with Backrooms, he turned it into a full feature film. For this, Parsons had no Hollywood credit, and he's only 20 years old, setting the record for youngest director with a number one movie. He's one of a handful of directors this year with surprise horror hits who came up through YouTube rather than Hollywood. Box office data shows he also managed to pull off something people thought might be impossible. He got young people into the theater. That is the generation Hollywood thought it might have lost forever due to streaming, the pandemic, etc. But by one estimate, 86% of the audience for Backrooms was under 35. Those are the headlines. Today on The Daily, a walking tour of Washington, D.C. with Times investigative reporter David Farenthold, who's been looking into how President Trump has been trying to renovate and reshape the nation's capital. You can listen to that in the New York Times app or wherever you get your podcasts. I'm Tracy Mumford. We'll be back tomorrow. The solar panels, batteries and other hardware, it's all quality tech that's built to last. Of course, making solar simpler for your home. That's good energy. Visit goodenergy.co.uk.