Inside the world’s busiest airport during DHS shutdown USA Today - Vertical Mar 27, 2026 Mar 27, 2026 Updated Mar 27, 2026 0 AP Top Stories April 24 AP top stories for April 20 Most Americans Still Believe in the American Dream — But Optimism Isn’t Equal Fuel prices driving up food costs, straining supply chains, says Chilliwack grocer UVa DE Melton on pre-draft process AP top stories April 19 Wembanyama Scores 35 To Make Spurs History In Playoff Debut Most MLB World Series Wins in History Track drying underway at Talladega Superspeedway after Saturday rain The state redistricting fight was one that Trump started UVa RB Taylor on process, build up to 2026 NFL Draft Fans react to the Pittsburgh Steelers’ selection at 169th overall Laura Barry-Lenger, 18, voted in her first election AP top stories April 26 Candace Owens accuses Erika Kirk of lying about security threat Pope departs for Africa as Trump issues scathing Truth Social post Karoline Leavitt Defends $400 Million White House Renovation Iran rules out talks with US unless blockade of ports lifted Mom takes on Silicon Valley after AI caused son's death Joey Logano breaks down big one at Talladega Superspeedway, Jack Links 500 USA TODAY's Eve Chen takes you inside the world's busiest airport during the DHS shutdown. As featured on TSA workers might get paid Monday, but their worries and airport woes could linger Experts and labor leaders say the mammoth security lines at some U.S. airports would not disappear overnight. Latest video Republican lawyer makes closing argument, Democrat makes rebuttal Pope says churches must overcome differences at Archbishop of Canterbury meeting DC gala shooting: What we know about the suspect Trump calls CBS correspondent Norah O’Donnell a ‘disgrace’ Closed circuit TV captures armed man sprinting through security during White House Correspondents' Dinner Joey Logano breaks down big one at Talladega Superspeedway, Jack Links 500 The 10 safest cities in the United States Rep. Lawler recounts 'chaos and confusion' during White House Correspondents' Dinner Facebook Twitter Bluesky WhatsApp SMS Email Print Copy article link Save 0 Comments
TSA workers might get paid Monday, but their worries and airport woes could linger Experts and labor leaders say the mammoth security lines at some U.S. airports would not disappear overnight.
Closed circuit TV captures armed man sprinting through security during White House Correspondents' Dinner