Paul Krugman gives his perspective on Trump’s oil delusions:
It’s amazing, if you think about it: Trump launched a war for oil without talking to the oil companies first.
On the day before, the Bureau of Land Management auctioned off more than 20,000 acres of public land in Colorado for oil and gas drilling. Or I should say, tried to auction the land off — because there were no bids, despite the fact that the land was offered at very low prices.
If they’re not interested in drilling in Colorado, why would they drill in Venezuela?
Krugman goes on to quote Trump’s second inaugural speech, and I’m going to quote it here at greater length:
The inflation crisis was caused by massive overspending and escalating energy prices, and that is why today I will also declare a national energy emergency. We will drill, baby, drill. (Applause.)
America will be a manufacturing nation once again, and we have something that no other manufacturing nation will ever have — the largest amount of oil and gas of any country on earth — and we are going to use it. We’ll use it. (Applause.)
We will bring prices down, fill our strategic reserves up again right to the top, and export American energy all over the world. (Applause.)
We will be a rich nation again, and it is that liquid gold under our feet that will help to do it.
Trump and his followers seemed to believe that oil and gas production were down during the Biden administration, but just the opposite was true. Here is a Reuters article published on March 28, 2024:
The counter-intuitive fossil fuel boom under Biden reflects an awkward truth for his supporters and detractors alike ahead of the November elections, proving that what happens in globally interconnected markets like oil and gas is often well outside the immediate control of the person in the White House.
In Biden’s case, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine pushed oil and gas prices so high that many producers worldwide made record profits, not just those in the United States. The global economic recovery that followed the darkest days of the COVID pandemic also rapidly pumped up demand for fossil fuels.
The profits of the top five publicly traded oil companies, for example — BP, Shell, Exxon, Chevron, and Total Energies — amounted to $410 billion during the first three years of the Biden administration, a 100% increase over the first three years of Donald Trump’s presidency, according to data compiled by Reuters.
So, even as Biden’s policies were encouraging investment in alternative energy technologies, oil was booming, which caused oil prices to drop eventually. And now oil prices are too low to justify more oil exploration or rebuilding infrastructure in Venezuela.
Back to Krugman:
Trump clearly pictures America in 2025 as being like East Texas in the early 20th century — a place where all you have to do is drill a hole in the ground, and oil gushes out….
… But it doesn’t work like that anymore. After decades of oil extraction, gushers are a thing of the past. Today, most of the oil extracted by the U.S. petroleum industry is shale oil. To extract that oil sedimentary rocks must be fractured with pressurized liquids — “fracking.” Now, there are many environmental issues associated with fracking. But even if you ignore those concerns, drilling a new well isn’t worth doing unless the price of oil is sufficiently high.
As in most things, Trump is stuck in the past, floating around somewhere between the McKinley Administration and the end of the 1980s, when Michael Crawford was the hit of Broadway in Phantom of the Opera. And with a long pause in Studio 54 in the late 1970s.
Regarding Trump’s utterly stupid attempt to criminally prosecute Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell — Powell’s tenure is over in four months. If Trump thought he could drive Powell out a few weeks early, he appears to be mistaken. Powell is not backing down. See commentary by Jonathan Chait at The Atlantic:
Every affluent Republican, from the tech right to fossil-fuel owners to heirs managing their inherited portfolios, has a direct and visible interest in stable and competent monetary policy. The Republican Party’s respect for the Fed’s independence is already evident in a recent Supreme Court ruling, in which the conservative majority appears to be seeking to create a special exemption for the Federal Reserve from the Court’s general doctrine that presidents are entitled to fire the heads of independent agencies. When Trump messes with the Fed, he is defecating where his wealthy donors eat. Perhaps they will go along with this, too, but he is testing the limits of their acquiescence.
This also is a useful observation:
The apparent source of this desperate gamble is that Trump seems keenly aware that the public disapproves of his presidency and his economic policy making. But rather than move to the center and try to allay the concerns of his wavering supporters, Trump’s response to adversity has been to try to seize as much economic and political power as he can, as fast as possible.
Thus the invasion of Venezuela, which he hopes will provide him with a windfall source of petro-dollars. (Sunday night, Trump shared on Truth Social a mock biography describing himself as “Acting President of Venezuela.”) After floating a proposal to cap credit-card interest rates that stands little chance of passage in Congress, he told reporters on Air Force One that firms that fail to comply with his target by January 20—before any law capping interest rates can conceivably make it through the House and Senate—will be “in violation of the law.”
And he’s also determined to get rid of Powell earlier so he can begin to dictate monetary policy asap. My impression is that Trump want to goose the economy before the midterms. Trump, of course, is the last person on the planet we want to be in charge of U.S. monetary policy. We’d be better off consulting a Magic 8 Ball. But no matter how many times he screws up, Trump appears to have an absolute faith that he’s the smartest guy on the planet and his way is the smart way, or at least the way that’s most advantageous for him.
See also Five Points on the Trump DOJ’s Attack on Fed Chair Jerome Powell by Layla Jones at TPM.
Trump is noticeably terrified of the Democrats retaking the House in the midterms and impeaching him again, which they almost certainly will. So it is interesting that instead of refocusing on the domestic issues he ran on, he’s doubling down on the unpopular crap. He’s trying to consolidate as much global power as he can, I suppose, although he’s pissing off a whole lot of people around the world in the process.
Also instead of trying to please his voters, he’s working hard to change how the midterm elections will be conducted, per WaPo. This is worth reading. The states run the elections and, in theory, can just ignore Trump’s schemes to end mail-in voting and even voting machines — yes, he wants to go back to hand counting, probably because it’s easier to bribe election supervisors than a Smartmatic. But he could cause enough confusion to affect the results.
But it seems to me he’s at least as likely to discourage Republican voters as Democratic ones. By November anyone leaning even slightly left will be prepared to swim with sharks and fight through a wall of ICE agents to get to the polls.