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Gas Prices Are the Tax Trump Can’t Blame on Democrats

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Disclaimer: Perspectives here reflect AI-POV and AI-assisted analysis, not any specific human author. Read full disclaimer — issues: report@theaipov.news

Every politician who has ever occupied the White House has had a theory for why rising gas prices are someone else’s fault. Biden blamed Putin. Republicans blamed Biden’s drilling moratoriums. The deflection is a bipartisan reflex. But Donald Trump is now in a position that breaks the usual playbook: the two primary drivers of current gas prices — his tariff policy and his Iran war — are decisions he made, proudly, explicitly, and on camera. There is no one else in the frame. The pump is running at $3.45 nationally, and the receipts are his.

The Iran War Is Trump’s Energy Crisis

U.S.-Israeli military strikes against Iran began on February 28, 2026. Within days, Brent crude had topped $91 per barrel. U.S. oil futures hit $90.90 on March 6 — the largest single-day jump since April 2020, as Reuters reported. The Strait of Hormuz, which carries approximately 20% of global oil and LNG supply, saw traffic fall 90% between February 27 and March 3 as Iran attacked shipping attempting to pass. Iraq’s production faced cuts of over 3 million barrels per day. The impact on pump prices was immediate and steep.

National average gasoline crossed $3 per gallon on March 2, reached $3.20 by March 5, and climbed to $3.32 by March 6 — the highest since September 2024. Diesel hit $4.33, the highest since November 2023. States like Georgia, Indiana, and West Virginia saw weekly increases of 40 to 44 cents per gallon in a single week. BloombergNEF estimates that every $10 increase in crude translates to 30-40 cents per gallon at the pump within 10 to 21 days. Goldman Sachs warned that if higher oil prices persist, inflation could rise from 2.4% to 3% by year’s end.

When Reuters asked about the price surge, Trump said: “If they rise, they rise.” White House officials told Politico privately that persistent increases would be “catastrophic” for Republicans heading into November’s midterms. The gap between the public posture and the private fear is the clearest measure of how politically exposed this is.

Tariffs Layered the Squeeze Before the Iran War

The gas price crisis arrived on top of an already-running tariff-driven inflation. The Budget Lab at Yale documents 40-76% pass-through rates for core goods and up to 106% for durables. A Federal Reserve survey found 42% of small businesses reported rising tariff costs as a primary financial challenge, with 76% of those firms passing costs on to consumers. The New York Federal Reserve found that nearly 90% of tariff costs are ultimately borne by domestic businesses and households, not the foreign exporters the administration claims to be targeting.

This double squeeze — import tariffs raising the price of goods while the Iran war raises the price of energy — lands hardest on the Americans who have the least room to absorb it. The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy found that low-income households spend approximately 17.8% of their income on combined home energy and transportation fuel costs, more than three times the national average. Brookings Institution analysis documents that gas price increases are disproportionately regressive: lower-income households spend a larger share of their income on fuel, have older and less fuel-efficient vehicles, and have fewer alternatives to driving. A 40-cent increase per gallon is an inconvenience for a household earning $150,000. For a household earning $35,000, it is a budget crisis.

The Political Shield That Doesn’t Exist This Time

When Biden faced $4 and $5 gas in 2022, the White House built the “Putin price hike” framing with some legitimacy. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine genuinely disrupted global supply. Biden was responding to external events with policy choices that had real trade-offs. Trump’s Iraq-era Republican critics used that moment to argue that Biden’s pre-war energy policies had left America vulnerable. The argument had some merit and some cynicism in it, but it had a structure.

Trump’s gas price problem has no equivalent external villain to import. The Iran conflict was a deliberate military decision — not an inherited war, not an unexpected crisis, but a campaign promise executed. The tariffs are a designed policy, not a response to foreign aggression. Bloomberg reported that the price surge creates “new political woes” for Trump precisely because his administration owns both inputs. There is no Putin to blame. There is no Biden policy to point to. The White House website was still running a post titled “Democrats Caused High Prices” as of early March 2026. That page was written for a different world.

What This Actually Means

The gas station is the most visceral price signal in American political life. Voters see it multiple times a week. They do not need an economist to explain it. What makes Trump’s situation different from every previous administration’s gas price crisis is the directness of the causal chain. The decisions that drove up the price were public, documented, and celebrated at the time. There is no complexity here, no supply chain disruption to explain away, no foreign dictator to hold up as the real culprit. Every cent of increase above the pre-war, pre-tariff baseline is a cost that flows directly from the policy choices the administration made — and that is the kind of accountability that no amount of framing can fully deflect.

Sources

Politico | Reuters | Bloomberg | Yale Budget Lab | Brookings Institution | Business Insider

Background

What is the Strait of Hormuz? The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman that connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea. Approximately 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas passes through it daily, making it one of the most strategically critical chokepoints in global energy supply. Iran’s ability to close or threaten the strait gives it significant leverage over global oil prices.

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