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President Biden Expected To Back Federal Gas Tax Holiday As He Ramps Up Criticism Of Oil Industry Amid Soaring Prices

PHILADELPHIA (CNN) -- President Joe Biden on Tuesday ratcheted up his public back-and-forth with the US oil and gas industry as he looks to spread around the blame for the nation's soaring gas prices.

After remarks on the authorization of Covid-19 vaccines for children under 5 years old, Biden was asked about a letter from the CEO of Chevron, which accused the President of seeking to vilify oil and gas producers as Americans struggle to fill their tanks and the White House faces increasing political pressure.

Biden responded: "He's mildly sensitive," adding: "I didn't know they'd get their feelings hurt that quickly."

The President has turned up the heat on oil and gas companies in recent weeks as gas prices have shot up, with the national average climbing above $5 per gallon at one point last week. Biden and his team have acknowledged in recent weeks that there is not much he can do to address the soaring prices, and the actions he has taken so far, such as a record-breaking release of oil from the country's strategic reserves, have not worked. Still, the President is considering other options and is expected to announce support for a federal gas tax holiday on Wednesday, according to two people briefed on the matter.

Biden has made Russia's war in Ukraine his top scapegoat for climbing gas prices but has also called out oil and gas companies, saying they aren't doing enough to bring down costs and accusing them of profiting off the war. He repeated some of those arguments on Tuesday, saying the country needs "more refining capacity."

"This idea that they don't have oil to drill and to bring up is simply not true," he said. "This piece of the Republicans talking about 'Biden shut down fields,' wrong. We ought to be able to work something out whereby they're able to increase refining capacity and still not give up on transitioning to renewable energy. They're both within realm of possibility."

In response to the President's criticisms, the oil industry has largely said that it is the Biden administration's fault that prices are so high because of what they perceive as limits on domestic oil and gas production.

Chevron CEO Mike Worth said in his letter on Tuesday that Biden should stop criticizing the oil and gas industry and called for a "change in approach" from the White House.

"Your Administration has largely sought to criticize, and at times vilify, our industry," Worth wrote in an open letter to Biden. "These actions are not beneficial to meeting the challenges we face and are not what the American people deserve."

Worth argued the industry needs "cooperation and support from your Administration for our country to return to a path toward greater energy security, economic prosperity, and environmental protection."

The letter was a response to a letter Biden sent to major oil refiners, pressuring them to increase their production. In that letter, the President told oil companies to take "immediate actions" to ramp up supply, telling them that "historically high" profit margins are unacceptable at a time when Americans continue to see soaring prices at the gas pump.

There have also been other broadsides from the White House toward the oil and gas industry. Earlier this month, a White House official strongly criticized Big Oil for banking huge profits in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which the administration has blamed for soaring gas prices, telling CNN it was "outrageous that oil and gas companies are able to take advantage and make four times the profits that they made when there wasn't a war."

Oil executives will convene at the White House this week to meet with Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, but the President has said he will not attend the meeting.

The Energy Department invited representatives from Marathon Petroleum, Valero Energy, ExxonMobil, Phillips 66, Chevron, BP and Shell to discuss high gas prices. Granholm said Sunday on CNN that the group would talk about the refining capacity in the country.

Biden expected to back national gas tax holiday

Biden's decision to throw his administration's support behind a national gas tax holiday -- which would require congressional action -- provides new life to an issue that has failed to gain traction on Capitol Hill up to this point.

White House officials had been weighing support for the proposal, which would pause the 18.3-cents-per-gallon tax on gas. But hurdles on Capitol Hill, including a cool reception from key Democrats like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and concerns about the policy effect of the move largely shifted the idea to the background over the last several months.

As gas prices continue to rise, however, administration officials have scrambled to find policy options that would address the pain at the pump -- or demonstrate support for action.

Biden, speaking to reporters on Tuesday, appeared to lean toward the idea when he noted a pause in the gas tax would have only a minor impact on funding for roads - a key policy concern.

"It will have some impact, but it's not going to have an impact on major road construction and major road repairs," he said, citing the major infrastructure package passed last year.

The President reiterated that he planned to make a decision this week. "I'm in a process and I'll have a decision before the week is out," he said.

(The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2022 Cable News Network, Inc., a WarnerMedia Company. All rights reserved.)

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