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Sunday, March 15, 2026

QUID PRO CRUDE: TRUMP'S TRANSACTIONAL LOVE AFFAIR WITH BIG OIL

 

QUID PRO CRUDE: TRUMP'S TRANSACTIONAL LOVE AFFAIR WITH BIG OIL

From the Strait of Hormuz to the Supreme Court: The 2026 oil wars explained

March 15, 2026

In April 2024, at a Mar-a-Lago dinner that would make the Teapot Dome scandal look like a church potluck, Donald Trump made twenty oil executives an offer they couldn't refuse: Give me a billion dollars, and I'll give you the keys to the kingdom—or at least the keys to every oil field, pipeline route, and offshore drilling platform from Alaska to the Gulf of Mexico.

The pitch was so transactional it would make a used car salesman blush. "You should raise $1 billion for my campaign," Trump reportedly told the room full of fossil fuel titans. "It's a deal, because you'll save way more than that from the taxes and regulations I'll cut."

Two years later, the oil wars are going well—and yes, that pun is fully intended, because we're talking about oil wells sprouting up faster than lawsuits in a D.C. courtroom.

Welcome to 2026, where the "Oil-Garchy" is real, the regulations are rolled back, and the legal battles are just getting started.

Meet Your Oil-Garchs: The Billionaire Boys' Club Running Energy Policy

If you're wondering who exactly showed up to that fateful dinner and what they got for their money, here's your lineup:

Harold Hamm – The Energy Whisperer

Company: Continental Resources
Net Worth: 18.5billion
Role: The man behind the curtain. Hamm didn't just donate—he helped pick the current Energy and Interior secretaries. When people say "Drill, Baby, Drill," they're basically quoting his daily affirmations.

Kelcy Warren – The Pipeline King

Company: Energy Transfer
Net Worth: 7.2billion
The Payoff: After contributing over $$5 million to the 2024 campaign, Warren watched Trump fast-track pipeline permits on Day One. His company's stock? Let's just say it's been having a very good year.

Jeff Hildebrand – The Alaskan Adventurer

Company: Hilcorp Energy
Net Worth: 12billion
The Bonus Round: Not only did Hildebrand get access to Alaskan federal lands at bargain-basement royalty rates, but his wife also scored an ambassadorship to Costa Rica. Nothing says "conflict of interest" like mixing diplomacy with drilling rights.

Tim Dunn – The Ideological Bankroller

Company: CrownQuest
Net Worth: 2.2billion+
The Long Game: Dunn helped fund "Project 2025," the conservative policy blueprint that reads like the oil industry's Christmas wish list. He now sits on the board of the America First Policy Institute, where he can make sure those wishes keep coming true.

The Oil Cabinet: When the Foxes Guard the Henhouse

But why stop at campaign donations when you can just staff the entire government with oil executives?

Chris Wright (Secretary of Energy): Former CEO of Liberty Energy, a fracking company. His job now? Maximize fossil fuel production and downplay that pesky "climate science" thing.

Doug Burgum (Secretary of the Interior): The former North Dakota governor has deep ties to Harold Hamm and now oversees drilling leases on federal lands. Spoiler alert: There are a lot of new leases.

Scott Bessent (Treasury Secretary): While technically a financier, Bessent is championing the "3-3-3 plan"—increasing U.S. oil production by 3 million barrels per day by 2028. Because nothing says "fiscal responsibility" like betting the economy on petroleum.

The Great Rollback: 140+ Environmental Rules, Gone in a Year

If you're keeping score at home, the Trump administration has dismantled environmental protections at a pace that would make a demolition crew jealous. Here are the greatest hits:

1. The "Endangerment Finding" Kill Shot

In early 2025, the EPA began rescinding the 2009 Endangerment Finding—the legal basis for regulating greenhouse gases. By declaring that CO₂ and methane don't pose a "significant" threat to public health, the administration effectively neutered the government's ability to regulate emissions.

Translation: Oil companies can now pollute with impunity, and there's no legal framework to stop them.

2. Methane: The Silent Profit Booster

Methane leaks are a major byproduct of oil drilling—and a potent greenhouse gas. In March 2025, the administration used the Congressional Review Act to void Biden's "Methane Rule."

What got axed:

  • The Waste Emissions Charge (companies no longer pay for methane leaks)
  • Reporting requirements (pushed back to 2034—a full decade of unmonitored emissions)
  • The "Super-Emitter Program" (satellite monitoring suspended, giving companies control over their own data)

The benefit to billionaires: Harold Hamm's Continental Resources alone saves hundreds of millions annually in compliance fees.

3. NEPA on Steroids: Pay-to-Play Permitting

The "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" (OBBBA) gutted the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which required environmental reviews for new projects.

The new rules:

  • Companies can pay a 125% fee to force expedited reviews
  • Environmental Assessments must be completed in 180 days (instead of years)
  • Agencies can no longer consider "cumulative effects" or "indirect impacts" (like, you know, climate change)

Translation: If you've got the cash, you can fast-track your pipeline, drilling rig, or refinery—environmental consequences be damned.

4. Federal Lands: Open for Business

Interior Secretary Doug Burgum replaced the Obama-era leasing program with what can only be described as a fossil fuel free-for-all.

The 11th National Program:

  • Opened 1.27 billion acres for offshore lease sales
  • Slashed royalty rates to 12.5% (the lowest since the early 2000s)
  • Expanded drilling into previously protected areas in Alaska and the Atlantic

The winner: Jeff Hildebrand's Hilcorp, which is now expanding into Alaskan federal lands at fire-sale prices.

5. Suing the States: "Protecting" Energy from "Overreach"

In April 2025, Trump issued an executive order directing the Attorney General to sue states like California, New York, and Vermont for imposing their own environmental regulations.

The goal: Prevent states from taxing or regulating oil companies that operate across state lines. Because why should California get to protect its own coastline?

The Resistance: Lawsuits, Lawsuits Everywhere

Of course, gutting decades of environmental law doesn't come without a fight. As of March 2026, a "tsunami of litigation" has hit federal courts, with environmental groups, labor unions, and blue states leading the charge.

The Big Three Legal Battles:

1. The Endangerment Finding Mega-Suit
Plaintiffs: Earthjustice, Sierra Club, SEIU, American Lung Association
The Argument: Rescinding the Endangerment Finding ignores 15 years of climate science and violates the Supreme Court's precedent in Massachusetts v. EPA.
Status: Headed for a Supreme Court showdown later this year.

2. The Methane Wars
Plaintiffs: Environmental Defense Fund, Food & Water Watch
The Argument: The EPA bypassed mandatory public comment periods, making the methane rule delay "arbitrary and capricious."
Status: Active litigation in multiple circuits.

3. California vs. Sable Offshore: The Defense Production Act Showdown
Plaintiffs: State of California, Center for Biological Diversity
The Issue: The administration is using the Defense Production Act (DPA)—a national security law—to override California's safety regulations and restart offshore drilling.
Recent Development: On March 12, 2026, a federal judge ordered the Interior Department to release all internal communications with Sable Offshore, following allegations of political meddling by billionaire donors.

The Youth Appeal: Lighthiser v. Trump

Perhaps the most compelling case comes from 18 young petitioners arguing that the 2025 executive orders violate their constitutional right to life and liberty by knowingly accelerating climate disasters.

Hearing date: April 13, 2026, Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

The Geopolitical Twist: Venezuela, Iran, and the New Oil Map

But wait—there's more! The oil wars aren't just happening in courtrooms and boardrooms. In 2026, they're also playing out on the global stage.

Venezuela: The Comeback Kid

Following political changes and eased U.S. sanctions, Chevron has become the primary U.S. player in Venezuela, expanding production in joint ventures like Petropiar. The goal? Provide a "heavy crude" alternative to Middle Eastern supply, which has been severely disrupted.

Fun fact: Jeff Hildebrand has pledged (at Trump's request) to help "rebuild" Venezuela's oil infrastructure. Because nothing says "America First" like investing in South American oil fields.

Iran: The Strait of Hormuz Crisis

As of March 2026, the U.S. and Israel are engaged in a kinetic conflict with Iran, leading to the "de facto" closure of the Strait of Hormuz—through which 20% of the world's oil typically flows.

The result: Oil prices are spiking, and U.S. companies are scrambling to secure alternative supply routes.

The Middle East Hub: Where the Oil-Garchs Play

Despite the conflict, major U.S. companies maintain deep interests in "stable" partner nations:

Chevron: Natural gas production in Israel (Leviathan & Tamar fields), Egypt, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia
ExxonMobil: LNG projects in Qatar (North Field), UAE (Abu Dhabi, Dubai)
ConocoPhillips: Massive LNG expansion in Qatar, Libya (Waha Concession)
Occidental: Enhanced oil recovery in Oman, UAE, Qatar

Risk note: Many companies have evacuated non-essential staff due to Iranian drone strikes and the ongoing naval blockade.

The Bottom Line: A Billion-Dollar Bet That Paid Off

Let's do the math. The oil industry didn't hand over a single 1billioncheckatthatMaraLagodinner.Butbyearly2025,theydfunneledover200 million into the campaign and associated Super PACs.

The return on investment?

According to 2026 financial tracking, the net worth of the top 15 "Oil-Garch" billionaires has surged by over $$40 billion since April 2024—largely due to deregulation and "Drill, Baby, Drill" policies.

That's a 20,000% return. Not bad for a dinner party.

Meanwhile, the administration has fulfilled nearly every promise made at that table:

  • LNG export freeze: Ended
  • Gulf of Mexico and Alaskan drilling: Expanded
  • EV transition rules: Rescinded
  • Methane regulations: Gutted
  • Federal land leases: Skyrocketing

The Verdict: Corruption or "Energy Dominance"?

Critics call it "open corruption." The administration calls it "restoring American energy dominance."

House and Senate Democrats have launched investigations into whether the administration is essentially "selling" federal policy. Environmental groups are filing lawsuits faster than the EPA can issue permits. And young activists are arguing in court that their constitutional rights are being violated.

But for now, the Oil-Garchy is winning. The wells are drilling, the pipelines are flowing, and the billionaires are getting richer.

As for the rest of us? Well, well, well—we'll just have to wait and see how this all plays out in court.

And maybe invest in some waterfront property. You know, before it's underwater.

For more information on the legal challenges to oil industry rollbacks, visit Earthjustice.org or the Center for Biological Diversity's litigation tracker.


The No Kings Coalition's next major mobilization is March 28, 2026. Find events near you and learn how to safely participate at nokings.org. Remember: nonviolent action, de-escalation, and constitutional rights are our principles and our power.

 #NoKingsProtest #NoKingsMar28 #NoKingsInAmerica #NoKings 

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