At a Dinner, Trump Assailed Climate Rules and
Asked $1 Billion From Big Oil
At a private meeting at Mar-a-Lago, the former
president said fossil fuel companies should donate to help him beat President
Biden.
Lisa
Friedman Coral DavenportJonathan Swan Maggie
Haberman
By Lisa
Friedman, Coral Davenport, Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman
May 9, 2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/09/climate/trump-oil-gas-mar-a-lago.html
Former
President Donald J. Trump told a group of oil executives and lobbyists gathered
at a dinner at his Mar-a-Lago resort last month that they should donate $1
billion to his presidential campaign because, if elected, he would roll back
environmental rules that he said hampered their industry, according to two
people who were there.
About 20
people attended an April 11 event billed as an “energy round table” at Mr.
Trump’s private club, according to those people, who asked not to be identified
in order to discuss the private event. Attendees included executives from
ExxonMobil, EQT Corporation and the American Petroleum Institute, which lobbies
for the oil industry.
The event
was organized by the oil billionaire Harold Hamm, who has for years helped to
shape Republican energy policies. It was first reported by The Washington Post.
Mr. Trump
has publicly railed for months against President Biden’s energy and
environmental agenda, as Mr. Biden has raced to restore and strengthen dozens
of climate and conservation rules that Mr. Trump had weakened or erased while
in office. In particular, Mr. Trump has promised to eliminate Mr. Biden’s new
climate rules intended to accelerate the nation’s transition to electric
vehicles, and to push a “drill, baby, drill” agenda aimed at opening up more
public lands to oil and gas exploration.
Mr. Biden
has called climate change an existential threat and has moved to cut the
pollution that is dangerously heating the planet and supercharging storms, heat
waves and drought.
Over a
dinner of chopped steak, Mr. Trump repeated his public promises to delete Mr.
Biden’s pollution controls, telling the attendees that they should donate
heavily to help him beat Mr. Biden because his policies would help their
industries.
“That has
been his pitch to everybody,” said Michael McKenna, who worked in the Trump
White House but did not attend the event in Florida.
Mr. McKenna
said the former president’s appeal to the fossil fuel industry could be summed
up as: “Look, you want me to win. You might not even like me, but your other
choice is four more years of these guys,” referring to the Biden
administration. He added, “The uniform sentiment of guys in the business
community is ‘We don’t want four more years of Team Biden.’”
Karoline
Leavitt, a spokeswoman for the Trump campaign, did not address the specifics of
what Mr. Trump was described as saying at the dinner. In a statement, she
attacked President Biden as controlled “by environmental extremists who are
trying to implement the most radical energy agenda in history and force
Americans to purchase electric vehicles they can’t afford,” and that Mr. Trump
is “supported by people who share his vision of American energy dominance to
protect our national security and bring down the cost of living for all
Americans.”
Mr. Biden’s
presidential campaign on Thursday accused Mr. Trump of “straight up selling out
working families for campaign donations from oil barons.”
Mr. Biden
has frustrated the fossil fuel industry by pursuing the most ambitious climate
agenda in the nation’s history. He has signed a sweeping law that pumps $370
billion into incentives for clean energy and electric vehicles and has enacted
a suite of tough regulations designed to sharply reduce emissions from the
burning of oil, gas and coal.
This year,
the Biden administration paused the permitting process for new facilities that
export liquefied natural gas in order to study their impact on climate change,
the economy and national security.
But the
fossil fuel industry has also enjoyed record profits under the Biden
administration. Last year, the United States produced record amounts of oil.
And even with the pause in new permits for gas export terminals, the United
States is the world’s leading exporter of natural gas and is still on track to
nearly double its export capacity by 2027 because of projects already permitted
and under construction.
Mr. Biden
has also approved several oil and gas projects sought by the fossil fuel
industry.
He has
authorized an enormous $8 billion oil development in Alaska known as the Willow
project. He also granted a crucial permit for the Mountain Valley Pipeline, a
project championed by Senator Joe Manchin III, a West Virginia Democrat,
despite opposition from climate experts and environmental groups. Last month,
undeterred by opposition from climate activists, the Biden administration also
gave approval for an oil export project in Texas known as the Sea Port Oil
Terminal.
Some oil
and gas executives have said that they would prefer some of Mr. Biden’s
regulations to remain, such as a rule requiring companies to detect and stop
methane leaks from oil and gas wells. They said they wanted consistency rather
than an endless pattern of regulatory whiplash in which rules are enacted by
one administration, repealed by the next and restored by the one after that.
Many,
however, have attacked Mr. Biden’s policies, and the industry has contributed
heavily to Mr. Trump’s presidential campaign.
Although
attendees were told that Mr. Trump’s event was an energy round table, waiting
on the chairs of executives and lobbyists at Mar-a-Lago were printouts of
PowerPoint slides about migrants at the southern border.
Part of the
meeting dwelled on migration, and Mr. Trump declared he wanted separate
divisions of Ultimate Fighting Championship fighters: one designated for
immigrants who came across the border illegally, and the other for “Americans.”
The room
was filled predominantly with oil and gas executives, including Mike Sabel, the
chief executive and founder of Venture Global LNG; Toby Rice, the president and
chief executive of EQT Corporation; Jack Fusco, the chief executive of Cheniere
Energy; and Nick Dell’Osso, the president of Chesapeake Energy.
Also in the
room were Doug Burgum, the governor of North Dakota and a former Republican
presidential candidate who has been acting as Mr. Trump’s point man on energy
issues; and Mr. Hamm, the billionaire executive chairman of Continental
Resources, which is among the biggest oil and gas drilling companies in
Oklahoma and North Dakota.
Accompanied
by Susie Wiles, his top political adviser; Taylor Budowich, a former aide; and
Meredith O’Rourke, a fund-raiser, Mr. Trump asked the executives to detail
their concerns on energy issues, according to the two attendees.
The
American Petroleum Institute, the nation’s top fossil fuel industry group, is
running an eight-figure national advertising campaign to promote fossil fuels
and “dismantle policy threats,” Mike Sommers, the chief executive of the trade
group, has said. Separately, the American Fuel & Petrochemical
Manufacturers, which represents petroleum refiners, has started to buy ads in
nine battleground states urging Americans to fight Mr. Biden’s regulation on
tailpipe emissions.
And states
with Republican attorneys general have filed legal challenges against most if
not all of Mr. Biden’s regulations, including a suit announced on Thursday by
27 states arguing that the administration overstepped its authority in cracking
down on smokestack pollution from power plants.
But Mr.
Trump told executives they were not fighting hard enough. He also went on a
rant about windmills, the attendees said. Mr. Trump has falsely claimed that
wind turbines cause cancer and that offshore wind farms are “driving whales
crazy.”
Mr. Trump
did not request money in exchange for killing Mr. Biden’s climate regulations,
the two people in the room maintained. Rather, the former president told
executives that he was determined to squash what he considered anti-business
policies, and that the oil industry should therefore want him to win and should
raise $1 billion to ensure his success.
He told the
executives that the amount of money they would save in taxes and legal expenses
after he repealed regulations would more than cover a billion dollar
contribution, the people said.
Mr. Hamm
has had Mr. Trump’s ear on energy issues dating back to the former president’s
2016 campaign and pushed him to appoint Scott Pruitt to run the Environmental
Protection Agency, where Mr. Pruitt denied the established science of climate
change and unraveled environmental protections.
After Mr.
Trump lost the 2020 election, Mr. Hamm briefly supported some of the former
president’s rivals, including Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida and former United
Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley. But the oil tycoon appeared to have had a
change of heart. Mr. Hamm donated $3,300 to Mr. Trump’s campaign last year, the
maximum allowed for a primary contribution, and another $3,300 in March,
according to campaign filings.
Mr. Hamm
did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr. McKenna said Mr. Hamm
continued to play an outsize role in Mr. Trump’s energy policy. “If Harold has
an idea, the rest of us have to chase it around,” he said. “Harold Hamm wants
that L.N.G. pause gone, he wants the California waiver and the tailpipe rule
gone.”
California
has for decades received waivers under the Clean Air Act that authorize it to
set environmental rules that are tougher than federal regulations. To do
business in California, automakers and other industries must comply with its
rules. Mr. Trump has promised to revoke California’s waivers.
Lisa
Friedman is a Times reporter who writes about how governments are addressing
climate change and the effects of those policies on communities. More about
Lisa Friedman
Coral
Davenport covers energy and environment policy, with a focus on climate change,
for The Times. More about Coral Davenport
Jonathan
Swan is a political reporter covering the 2024 presidential election and Donald
Trump’s campaign. More about Jonathan Swan
Maggie
Haberman is a senior political correspondent reporting on the 2024 presidential
campaign, down ballot races across the country and the investigations into
former President Donald J. Trump. More about Maggie
Haberman


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