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Newsom Blames High Gas Prices on Oil Companies, Vows to Hurt Them with Punitive Tax
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Oct 9, 2022 15:23:59   #
Oldsailor65 Loc: Iowa
 
Newsom Blames High Gas Prices on Oil Companies, Vows to Hurt Them with Punitive Tax

California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday he will call a special session of the state Legislature in December to pass a new tax on oil company profits to punish them for what he called “rank price gouging.”

Gas prices soared across the nation this summer because of high inflation, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and ongoing disruptions in the global supply chain.

But while gas prices have recovered somewhat nationwide, they have continued to spike in California, hitting an average of $6.39 per gallon on Friday — $2.58 higher than the national average, according to AAA.

California has the second-highest gas tax in the country and other environmental rules that increase the cost of fuel in the nation’s most populous state. Still, Newsom said there is “nothing to justify” a price difference of more than $2.50 per gallon between California’s gas and prices in other states.

“It’s time to get serious. I’m s**k of this,” Newsom said. “We’ve been too timid.”

The oil industry has pointed to California’s environmental laws and regulations to explain why the state routinely has higher gas prices than the rest of the country. Kevin Slagle, vice president of the Western States Petroleum Association, said Newsom and state lawmakers should “take a hard look at decades of California energy policy” instead of proposing a new tax.

“If this was anything other than a political stunt, the governor wouldn’t wait two months and would call the special session now, before the e******n,” Slagle said. “This industry is ready right now to work on real solutions to energy costs and reliability — if that is what the governor is truly interested in.”

Several states chose to suspend their gas taxes this summer, including Maryland, New York and Georgia. Newsom and his fellow Democrats that control the state Legislature refused to do that, opting instead to send $9.5 billion in rebates to taxpayers — which began showing up in bank accounts this week.

It’s unclear how the tax Newsom is proposing would work. Newsom said he is still working out the details with legislative leaders, but on Friday said he wants the money to be “returned to taxpayers,” possibly by using money from the tax to pay for more rebates.

Will hitting oil companies with a punishing tax improve gas prices?
Yes: 0% (0 V**es)
No: 100% (20 V**es)
The state Legislature briefly considered a proposal earlier this year that would have imposed a “windfall profits tax” on oil companies’ gross receipts when the price of a gallon of gasoline was “a******lly high compared to the price of a barrel of oil.”

That proposal would have required state regulators to determine the tax rate, making sure it recovered any oil companies’ profit margins that exceeded 30 cents per gallon. The money from the tax would then have been returned to taxpayers via rebates.

Newsom did not comment on that proposal when it was introduced in March, and lawmakers quickly shelved it. It could, however, act as a blueprint for the new proposal being negotiated between Newsom and legislative leaders.

The Legislature’s top two leaders — Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon — said in a joint statement that lawmakers “will continue to examine all other options to help consumers.”

“A solution that takes excessive profits out of the hands of oil corporations and puts money back into the hands of consumers deserves strong consideration by the Legislature,” they said. “We look forward to examining the Governor’s detailed proposal when we receive it.”

California Republicans — who do not control enough seats to influence policy decisions in the Legislature — have called the tax “foolhardy.”

“Who here thinks that another tax is going to bring down your gas prices? Is going to bring down any costs in this state? It’s not going to happen,” Assembly Republican Leader James Gallagher told reporters on Wednesday.

Last month, regulators at the California Energy Commission wrote a letter to five oil refiners — Chevron, Marathon Petroleum, PBF Energy, Phillips 66 and Valero — demanding an explanation for why gas prices jumped 84 cents over a 10-day period even as oil prices fell. The commission wrote that the oil industry had “not provided an adequate and t***sparent explanation for this price spike, which is causing real economic hardship to millions of Californians.”

On Friday, Scott Folwarkow, Valero’s vice president for state government affairs, responded that “California is the most expensive operating environment in the country and a very hostile regulatory environment for refining.” He said that has caused refineries to close and tightened supply because California requires refineries to produce a specific fuel blend.

He declined to provide details about the company’s operations based on the same anti-trust concerns. But he said the company makes appropriate arrangements to source supply when some refineries are down for maintenance.

Newsom dismissed those arguments, saying that still doesn’t account for a $2.50 difference between California’s gas prices and those in the rest of the country.

“These guys are playing us for fools. They have for decades,” Newsom said.

The California Legislature usually meets between January and August, where they consider bills on a variety of topics. The governor has the power to call a special legislative session at any time by issuing a proclamation. When convened in a special session, lawmakers can only consider the issues mentioned in that proclamation.

The last time a California governor called a special legislative session was in 2015, when then-Gov. Jerry Brown asked lawmakers to pass bills about health care and t***sportation.

https://www.westernjournal.com/newsom-blames-high-gas-prices-oil-companies-vows-hurt-punitive-tax/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859

There is no end to the stupidity of liberals!!!



Reply
Oct 9, 2022 15:44:34   #
Bevvy
 
High gas prices are only one man's fault .... the dude occupying 1600 Pennsylvania Ave

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 15:45:19   #
pegw
 
We teally need a windfall profits tax. The oil companies are making out like the bandits they are.

Reply
 
 
Oct 9, 2022 15:57:48   #
Liberty Tree
 
pegw wrote:
We teally need a windfall profits tax. The oil companies are making out like the bandits they are.


Governments earn more in taxes per gallon than oil companies.

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 16:34:23   #
dtucker300 Loc: Vista, CA
 
pegw wrote:
We teally need a windfall profits tax. The oil companies are making out like the bandits they are.


That's Brilliant . Who ends up paying the tax in the end? The customers. The cost is passed on to the consumer making gas even more expensive. Perhaps you think this is supposed to drive the oil companies out of business and get people to quit driving ICE vehicles. Every time the l*****ts try to correct something they think is wrong they end up creating unintended consequences leading to something worse. Or in language that you may understand...everything the left touches turns to crap.

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 16:40:54   #
microphor Loc: Home is TN
 
Oldsailor65 wrote:
Newsom Blames High Gas Prices on Oil Companies, Vows to Hurt Them with Punitive Tax

California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday he will call a special session of the state Legislature in December to pass a new tax on oil company profits to punish them for what he called “rank price gouging.”

Gas prices soared across the nation this summer because of high inflation, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and ongoing disruptions in the global supply chain.

But while gas prices have recovered somewhat nationwide, they have continued to spike in California, hitting an average of $6.39 per gallon on Friday — $2.58 higher than the national average, according to AAA.

California has the second-highest gas tax in the country and other environmental rules that increase the cost of fuel in the nation’s most populous state. Still, Newsom said there is “nothing to justify” a price difference of more than $2.50 per gallon between California’s gas and prices in other states.

“It’s time to get serious. I’m s**k of this,” Newsom said. “We’ve been too timid.”

The oil industry has pointed to California’s environmental laws and regulations to explain why the state routinely has higher gas prices than the rest of the country. Kevin Slagle, vice president of the Western States Petroleum Association, said Newsom and state lawmakers should “take a hard look at decades of California energy policy” instead of proposing a new tax.

“If this was anything other than a political stunt, the governor wouldn’t wait two months and would call the special session now, before the e******n,” Slagle said. “This industry is ready right now to work on real solutions to energy costs and reliability — if that is what the governor is truly interested in.”

Several states chose to suspend their gas taxes this summer, including Maryland, New York and Georgia. Newsom and his fellow Democrats that control the state Legislature refused to do that, opting instead to send $9.5 billion in rebates to taxpayers — which began showing up in bank accounts this week.

It’s unclear how the tax Newsom is proposing would work. Newsom said he is still working out the details with legislative leaders, but on Friday said he wants the money to be “returned to taxpayers,” possibly by using money from the tax to pay for more rebates.

Will hitting oil companies with a punishing tax improve gas prices?
Yes: 0% (0 V**es)
No: 100% (20 V**es)
The state Legislature briefly considered a proposal earlier this year that would have imposed a “windfall profits tax” on oil companies’ gross receipts when the price of a gallon of gasoline was “a******lly high compared to the price of a barrel of oil.”

That proposal would have required state regulators to determine the tax rate, making sure it recovered any oil companies’ profit margins that exceeded 30 cents per gallon. The money from the tax would then have been returned to taxpayers via rebates.

Newsom did not comment on that proposal when it was introduced in March, and lawmakers quickly shelved it. It could, however, act as a blueprint for the new proposal being negotiated between Newsom and legislative leaders.

The Legislature’s top two leaders — Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon — said in a joint statement that lawmakers “will continue to examine all other options to help consumers.”

“A solution that takes excessive profits out of the hands of oil corporations and puts money back into the hands of consumers deserves strong consideration by the Legislature,” they said. “We look forward to examining the Governor’s detailed proposal when we receive it.”

California Republicans — who do not control enough seats to influence policy decisions in the Legislature — have called the tax “foolhardy.”

“Who here thinks that another tax is going to bring down your gas prices? Is going to bring down any costs in this state? It’s not going to happen,” Assembly Republican Leader James Gallagher told reporters on Wednesday.

Last month, regulators at the California Energy Commission wrote a letter to five oil refiners — Chevron, Marathon Petroleum, PBF Energy, Phillips 66 and Valero — demanding an explanation for why gas prices jumped 84 cents over a 10-day period even as oil prices fell. The commission wrote that the oil industry had “not provided an adequate and t***sparent explanation for this price spike, which is causing real economic hardship to millions of Californians.”

On Friday, Scott Folwarkow, Valero’s vice president for state government affairs, responded that “California is the most expensive operating environment in the country and a very hostile regulatory environment for refining.” He said that has caused refineries to close and tightened supply because California requires refineries to produce a specific fuel blend.

He declined to provide details about the company’s operations based on the same anti-trust concerns. But he said the company makes appropriate arrangements to source supply when some refineries are down for maintenance.

Newsom dismissed those arguments, saying that still doesn’t account for a $2.50 difference between California’s gas prices and those in the rest of the country.

“These guys are playing us for fools. They have for decades,” Newsom said.

The California Legislature usually meets between January and August, where they consider bills on a variety of topics. The governor has the power to call a special legislative session at any time by issuing a proclamation. When convened in a special session, lawmakers can only consider the issues mentioned in that proclamation.

The last time a California governor called a special legislative session was in 2015, when then-Gov. Jerry Brown asked lawmakers to pass bills about health care and t***sportation.

https://www.westernjournal.com/newsom-blames-high-gas-prices-oil-companies-vows-hurt-punitive-tax/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859

There is no end to the stupidity of liberals!!!
Newsom Blames High Gas Prices on Oil Companies, Vo... (show quote)

He's an evil man. He knows this tax will trickle down to his constituents. He doesn't care!

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 16:42:29   #
microphor Loc: Home is TN
 
pegw wrote:
We teally need a windfall profits tax. The oil companies are making out like the bandits they are.


You're as much a fool as he is. This will result in higher prices for consumers. That's how it works, don't be ignorant. This is Bidens doing.

Reply
 
 
Oct 9, 2022 16:43:11   #
microphor Loc: Home is TN
 
dtucker300 wrote:
That's Brilliant . Who ends up paying the tax in the end? The customers. The cost is passed on to the consumer making gas even more expensive. Perhaps you think this is supposed to drive the oil companies out of business and get people to quit driving ICE vehicles. Every time the l*****ts try to correct something they think is wrong they end up creating unintended consequences leading to something worse. Or in language that you may understand...everything the left touches turns to crap.
That's Brilliant img src="https://static.onepolit... (show quote)


Amen

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 16:44:04   #
American Vet
 
microphor wrote:
You're as much a fool as he is. This will result in higher prices for consumers. That's how it works, don't be ignorant. This is Bidens doing.


And it will hurt middle/low income people the hardest.

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 16:46:45   #
dtucker300 Loc: Vista, CA
 
microphor wrote:
He's an evil man. He knows this tax will trickle down to his constituents. He doesn't care!


The left misuses the term "trickle-down economics" to disparage tax cuts when the true definition of "trickle-down economics" is tax increases that are passed on as higher costs to the consumer.

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 17:31:56   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
Oldsailor65 wrote:
Newsom Blames High Gas Prices on Oil Companies, Vows to Hurt Them with Punitive Tax

California Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday he will call a special session of the state Legislature in December to pass a new tax on oil company profits to punish them for what he called “rank price gouging.”

Gas prices soared across the nation this summer because of high inflation, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and ongoing disruptions in the global supply chain.

But while gas prices have recovered somewhat nationwide, they have continued to spike in California, hitting an average of $6.39 per gallon on Friday — $2.58 higher than the national average, according to AAA.

California has the second-highest gas tax in the country and other environmental rules that increase the cost of fuel in the nation’s most populous state. Still, Newsom said there is “nothing to justify” a price difference of more than $2.50 per gallon between California’s gas and prices in other states.

“It’s time to get serious. I’m s**k of this,” Newsom said. “We’ve been too timid.”

The oil industry has pointed to California’s environmental laws and regulations to explain why the state routinely has higher gas prices than the rest of the country. Kevin Slagle, vice president of the Western States Petroleum Association, said Newsom and state lawmakers should “take a hard look at decades of California energy policy” instead of proposing a new tax.

“If this was anything other than a political stunt, the governor wouldn’t wait two months and would call the special session now, before the e******n,” Slagle said. “This industry is ready right now to work on real solutions to energy costs and reliability — if that is what the governor is truly interested in.”

Several states chose to suspend their gas taxes this summer, including Maryland, New York and Georgia. Newsom and his fellow Democrats that control the state Legislature refused to do that, opting instead to send $9.5 billion in rebates to taxpayers — which began showing up in bank accounts this week.

It’s unclear how the tax Newsom is proposing would work. Newsom said he is still working out the details with legislative leaders, but on Friday said he wants the money to be “returned to taxpayers,” possibly by using money from the tax to pay for more rebates.

Will hitting oil companies with a punishing tax improve gas prices?
Yes: 0% (0 V**es)
No: 100% (20 V**es)
The state Legislature briefly considered a proposal earlier this year that would have imposed a “windfall profits tax” on oil companies’ gross receipts when the price of a gallon of gasoline was “a******lly high compared to the price of a barrel of oil.”

That proposal would have required state regulators to determine the tax rate, making sure it recovered any oil companies’ profit margins that exceeded 30 cents per gallon. The money from the tax would then have been returned to taxpayers via rebates.

Newsom did not comment on that proposal when it was introduced in March, and lawmakers quickly shelved it. It could, however, act as a blueprint for the new proposal being negotiated between Newsom and legislative leaders.

The Legislature’s top two leaders — Senate President Pro Tempore Toni Atkins and Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon — said in a joint statement that lawmakers “will continue to examine all other options to help consumers.”

“A solution that takes excessive profits out of the hands of oil corporations and puts money back into the hands of consumers deserves strong consideration by the Legislature,” they said. “We look forward to examining the Governor’s detailed proposal when we receive it.”

California Republicans — who do not control enough seats to influence policy decisions in the Legislature — have called the tax “foolhardy.”

“Who here thinks that another tax is going to bring down your gas prices? Is going to bring down any costs in this state? It’s not going to happen,” Assembly Republican Leader James Gallagher told reporters on Wednesday.

Last month, regulators at the California Energy Commission wrote a letter to five oil refiners — Chevron, Marathon Petroleum, PBF Energy, Phillips 66 and Valero — demanding an explanation for why gas prices jumped 84 cents over a 10-day period even as oil prices fell. The commission wrote that the oil industry had “not provided an adequate and t***sparent explanation for this price spike, which is causing real economic hardship to millions of Californians.”

On Friday, Scott Folwarkow, Valero’s vice president for state government affairs, responded that “California is the most expensive operating environment in the country and a very hostile regulatory environment for refining.” He said that has caused refineries to close and tightened supply because California requires refineries to produce a specific fuel blend.

He declined to provide details about the company’s operations based on the same anti-trust concerns. But he said the company makes appropriate arrangements to source supply when some refineries are down for maintenance.

Newsom dismissed those arguments, saying that still doesn’t account for a $2.50 difference between California’s gas prices and those in the rest of the country.

“These guys are playing us for fools. They have for decades,” Newsom said.

The California Legislature usually meets between January and August, where they consider bills on a variety of topics. The governor has the power to call a special legislative session at any time by issuing a proclamation. When convened in a special session, lawmakers can only consider the issues mentioned in that proclamation.

The last time a California governor called a special legislative session was in 2015, when then-Gov. Jerry Brown asked lawmakers to pass bills about health care and t***sportation.

https://www.westernjournal.com/newsom-blames-high-gas-prices-oil-companies-vows-hurt-punitive-tax/?utm_source=Email&utm_medium=conservative-brief-CT&utm_campaign=dailyam&utm_content=conservative-tribune&ats_es=8fb799e06563a601f50b5fdaf395b859

There is no end to the stupidity of liberals!!!
Newsom Blames High Gas Prices on Oil Companies, Vo... (show quote)

Hurt em right into his pocket! Also wants to change cally constitution to include all 40 weeks of pregnancy a******ns after he already said a******ns up to 28 days after! Wants to make sure

Reply
 
 
Oct 9, 2022 17:32:38   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
pegw wrote:
We teally need a windfall profits tax. The oil companies are making out like the bandits they are.


We need a politicians windfall tax and complete audit!

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 17:33:07   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
Liberty Tree wrote:
Governments earn more in taxes per gallon than oil companies.


Especially call politicians

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 17:34:01   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
microphor wrote:
You're as much a fool as he is. This will result in higher prices for consumers. That's how it works, don't be ignorant. This is Bidens doing.


She’s prob to old to drive!

Reply
Oct 9, 2022 18:03:05   #
WinkyTink Loc: Hill Country, TX
 
American Vet wrote:
And it will hurt middle/low income people the hardest.


Especially women, children, racial minorities and preverts.

Reply
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