NEED TO KNOW

  • Steve Scalise told CNBC's Squawk Box gas was "almost $6 a gallon" two years ago — it was $3.66
  • Host Joe Kernen, a longtime Trump golfing partner, interrupted with a live correction
  • National average is currently $4.30, the highest in four years amid the Iran war

WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — House Majority Leader Steve Scalise told a national television audience Thursday that gas prices were nearly $6 a gallon two years ago. The CNBC host running the interview corrected him on the spot.

The big picture: Scalise was making the case for Republicans holding the House in November when the conversation turned to inflation and energy costs.

Freedom-Loving Beachwear by Red Beach Nation - Save 10% With Code RVM10

  • He claimed prices today are "over 30 percent below where we were just two years ago"
  • AAA data shows the opposite — prices are up roughly 17 percent over the same window

Why it matters: The fact-check happened on a network and from a host generally favorable to the administration, which makes the moment harder to dismiss as partisan media.

Driving the news: The interview aired on Squawk Box as gas prices hit a four-year high driven by the ongoing US-Iran conflict that began at the end of February.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE THE DUPREE REPORT

Following ongoing debates over border security and immigration policy in 2026, do you support stricter enforcement measures?

By completing the poll, you agree to receive emails from The Dupree Report, occasional offers from our partners and that you've read and agree to our privacy policy and legal statement.
  • National average gas price on April 30, 2026: $4.30 per gallon
  • National average gas price on April 30, 2024: $3.66 per gallon
  • All-time national peak: roughly $5.07, briefly, in June 2022

What they're saying: The exchange unfolded in real time on air.

  • Steve Scalise, House Majority Leader — "People will remember, two years ago, we were paying almost $6 per gallon of gasoline. Right now it's in the [$3 range]."
  • Joe Kernen, CNBC Squawk Box host — "When were we paying $6?"
  • Scalise responded "Two and a half years ago." Kernen pushed back: "That wasn't the average price. We are actually above where we were then. Two years ago the average was $3.65."

Yes, but: Scalise wasn't the only Republican stretching pump-price math this week, and the pattern isn't unique to one party.

  • Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told a House hearing Wednesday California gas was "8 bucks" before the Iran war — the actual February average was $4.64
  • Sen. Tim Scott told Fox Business gas prices "continue to come down" — they have risen every week of the past month
  • Democrats made comparable claims about presidential price control during the 2022 spike, when Biden took credit for declines driven by global market shifts

Between the lines: Presidents rarely set gas prices. Both parties campaign as if they do, then get cornered when global events move the number against them.

  • The June 2022 peak under Biden tracked Russia's Ukraine invasion and OPEC supply decisions, not White House policy
  • The April 2026 spike tracks the Iran war and the Strait of Hormuz risk premium, not Trump executive orders
  • The bipartisan pattern is identical: claim credit for declines, deflect blame for rises, hope voters don't notice the consistency

What's next:

  • AAA expects continued volatility tied to Iran conflict developments and Strait of Hormuz tanker traffic
  • The administration faces midterm pressure as 34 states now show averages above $4 per gallon
  • House Republicans have not issued a correction of Scalise's claim

If presidents can't actually set gas prices, why does every party of every administration insist they can — until the number stops cooperating?

Sources

This report was compiled using information from CNN, Common Dreams, Raw Story, MSNBC, KRDO, ABC17 News, and AAA fuel price data.

Freedom-Loving Beachwear by Red Beach Nation - Save 10% With Code RVM10