Oil is fungible: if the price goes up somewhere, producers will arbitrage selling there (absent restrictions on exports, which are claimed to have their own problems). It would be very hard to subsidize on short notice, hard to put in place via windfall taxes against oil lobbyists, hard to reverse once put in place and costly to administer technically and in practice, especially considering US federalism. Last, quite bizarre in a nominally free market economy. Sure, some oil producing countries subsidize gas heavily. But on balance they are not especially well run countries. So... higher prices, which pisses off drivers of big SUVs and trucks (MAGA's demographic).
What's going on with shipping YouTube 3:45 in and talks about precisely the source of pricing pressure. Dude has been killing it covering Hormuz for the last 4 weeks, probably 10x his channel subscribers since the war started (or at least since the Houthis started sniping). Lots of solid coverage about the shipping impact, knows his subject.
What he says: the US competes on world commodity markets for a whole bunch of stuff that has become a lot expensive: oil, fertilizer, helium.
Some oil still gets imported, depending on the region: What Drives California’s Gasoline Prices?
Imported crude and refined oil can come from domestic sources, but the majority comes from Asia, Africa, South America, and the Middle East. Overseas supply can take three weeks to arrive at California marine terminals, isolating California oil refineries and fuel distribution centers by time and distance. As a result, price spikes triggered by unplanned refinery outages or international supply shocks may last longer for Californians because resupply time is longer.
Imported gasoline and blending components accounted for 19 percent of supply in 2025. Supplies of gasoline and diesel fuel from outside the state are routinely needed to balance supply with demand.
One more item comes to mind: Canada's Pierre Trudeau had a plan to transfer wealth out of Alberta's oil by selling oil more cheaply domestically, the New Energy Program.
Created under the Liberal government of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau on October 28, 1980, following the two oil crises of the 1970s, the NEP had three main objectives: increase ownership of the oil industry by Canadians; price energy fairly for Canadian consumers; and provide Canadian energy self-sufficiency. The NEP was also designed to promote lower prices through price controls; promote exploration for oil in Canada; promote alternative energy sources; and increase federal government revenues from oil sales through a variety of taxes and revenue-sharing with the oil-producing Western Canadian provinces.
40+ years later, Albertans still hate the Fed Liberals about it. While it's not an exact fit, the idea of "making oil cheaper for all Americans" still somewhat implies transferring wealth out of the oil patches (typically Republican states) to the rest of the country.
p.s. Just to be clear: Yes, oil prices are a problem even for the USA. Still, the current oil prices, and strait out supply situation, is significantly worse for many other countries.
moving from the theoretical to proof-in-the-pudding
(this is from US government's own reporting, showing changes from February 2026 to March 2026)
US consumer inflation hot in March amid record surge in gasoline prices | Reuters
The Consumer Price Index jumped 0.9% last month, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said, the largest increase since June 2022, when prices soared in response to the Russia-Ukraine war. Consumer prices rose 0.3% in February. Last month's increase was in line with economists' expectations.
A 21.2% jump in gasoline prices, the largest since the government started consistently tracking the series in 1967, accounted for nearly three quarters of the monthly increase in the CPI. Other motor fuels, which include diesel, also soared by a record 30.8%.