What to Follow Right Now: Nothing Is Contained
The ceasefire looks shaky, inflation is biting, and the courts are still testing the limits of Trump’s power.
The biggest story today is not just that the headlines are chaotic again. It is that the same instability is now showing up in three places at once: in war diplomacy, in household prices, and in the legal fight over how far Trump can push executive power on the economy.
Start with Iran and the ceasefire that does not look especially ceasefire-ish. U.S. and Iranian officials are preparing for high-level talks, but Israel and Hezbollah are still trading fire, and AP reports that Tehran is still using the Strait of Hormuz as leverage. That matters because the market may want to treat this as de-escalation, but the underlying machinery of disruption is still very much in place. This is not peace yet. It is a fragile pause with a live wire running through it.
The second thing to follow is inflation, because this is where the war turns into daily life. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported this morning that CPI rose 0.9% in March and 3.3% over the last 12 months, with the energy index up 10.9% for the month and gasoline up 21.2%. Real average hourly earnings fell 0.6% in March, which is the part that tends to get lost when politicians talk about strength and resilience. People do not experience geopolitics as an abstraction. They experience it at the pump, at the grocery store, and in the shrinking space between wages and bills.
The third thing to watch is the tariff fight back in court, because it tells you a lot about how this administration is operating. The U.S. Court of International Trade heard arguments Friday over Trump’s temporary global tariffs after the Supreme Court struck down his earlier IEEPA-based tariff program on February 20. AP reports that Trump then pivoted to a 10% tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, which can last 150 days without congressional approval and is currently set to expire on July 24. So this is not just a trade story. It is a power story: how many times the White House can repackage the same agenda under a different legal theory before the courts slam the door again.
Put together, those are the three threads worth keeping your eyes on: whether the Middle East calm holds long enough to matter, whether the price shock keeps spreading through the economy, and whether the courts are willing to keep acting as a brake on improvised executive power. That is the real shape of the day. The headlines may look separate, but they are all versions of the same question: how much instability can be rebranded before it starts breaking things people can actually feel.
A couple of side watches: Putin announced a 32-hour Orthodox Easter ceasefire in Ukraine, though past holiday truces have not held, and a federal judge blocked the administration’s move to end TPS protections for more than 5,000 Ethiopians, another reminder that immigration policy is still getting routed through the courts.




On top of all that, ICE is using Flock cameras to get immigrant information even though Flock claims they don't work with ICE.
My weekend lens for the Middle East is to contemplate who among the players benefits from the US and the West being further bogged down in Iran. Who among nation states benefits from provoking Trump to emphasis his leadership and authority by tripling down, maybe blowing up more things, some "maximum lethality"porn. I am sure there are plenty of candidates.
And how about the substance and timing of Melania's bizarre presser?