Watch Darrell Issa Obliterate Jasmine Crockett's Self-Righteous Performance About Protecti...
Matt Taibbi Lays Out Biden-Era Censorship of Conservatives on Social Media
Right Before Corey Booker Began His Crying on the Senate Floor, His Staffer...
Trump Rakes Democrat Senator Over the Coals for Trying to Stop Tariffs
Let's Keep One Thing in Mind on 'Ghost Gun' Case, Despite California's Worries
NRA Files Lawsuit Challenging Colorado's Gun Excise Tax
Jim Cramer Goes On Ridiculous Rant About Trump Economy
Trump: ‘Maybe 30’ People Interested in UN Ambassador Role
Macron Regime Imprisons Right-Wing Opposition Leader Marine Le Pen, Bans Her From 2027...
Israeli Woman Once Held Hostage by Hamas Receives Prestigious Award From the State...
Voters in This State Show Support for Creating a State-Level DOGE
Madness: Why British Cops Showed Up at a Family's Home and Arrested Both...
Harvard Funding Under Review Over Antisemitism
Fani Willis Caught Again With Lover After Insisting Affair Ended
DOGE Just Gutted the US Institute of Peace
Tipsheet

Gas Prices Reach New Highs After Holiday Weekend, And They’re Higher in Blue States

AP Photo/David Zalubowski

As any American who has hit the road during the opening weeks of this summer knows, prices at the pump are soaring.

The national average of a gallon of regular, unleaded gasoline reached $3.13 on Tuesday, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA). Such a high price would have been unthinkable two summers ago, when the national average sat at $2.75 per gallon.

Advertisement

Travellers hitting the road over the holiday weekend braved the highest Independence Day gas prices in seven years, when the national average sat at $3.66 per gallon.

“Today, 89% of U.S. gas stations are selling regular unleaded for $2.75 or more,” AAA spokesperson Jeannette McGee said on June 28. “That is a stark increase over last July 4 when only a quarter of stations were selling gas for more than $2.25.”

California ($4.31), Hawaii ($4.03), Washington ($3.81), and Nevada ($3.77) -- all states carried by Joe Biden last November -- were the states with the highest average prices on Tuesday morning. Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Utah rounded out the list of states with average prices above $3.50.

21 of the 50 states reported gas prices less than $3 per gallon, and just 11 reported prices below $2.90 per gallon. All 11 of these states, Alabama, Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas, were carried by Donald Trump in the 2020 election.

As the summer continues and many Americans take the vacations they’ve put off for a year, there seems to be no end to this gas-flation in sight.

Of course, President Joe Biden and other Democrats are not completely to blame for the staggering increases. The demand created by economic re-openings has created an unstable oil market, and no politician is responsible for anyone’s holiday weekend travel plans.

Advertisement

However, the White House has done little to quell the concerns caused by widespread increases. Biden’s climate agenda involved cancelling the construction of the Keystone Pipeline on his first day in office, a move that eliminated thousands of oil jobs.

Biden also responded apathetically to the Colonial Pipeline ransomware attack, which was compromised by a Russia-linked cybercriminal group back in May. The Houston-based pipeline carries oil to the Eastern U.S., and fears about the cyberattack prompted panic gas buying, driving up already-rising prices.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement