Report: Trump Promised to Scrap Climate Laws if US Oil Bosses Donated $1 Billion

It “certainly looks a lot like quid pro quo.”

An illustration of Donald Trump sitting atop barrels of oil as he waves, presumably, to oil executives.

Mother Jones; Charles Sykes/AP; Getty

This story was originally published by the Guardian and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

Donald Trump dangled a brazen “deal” in front of some of the top US oil bosses last month, proposing that they give him $1 billion for his White House re-election campaign and vowing that once back in office he would instantly tear up Joe Biden’s environmental regulations and prevent any new ones, according to a bombshell new report.

According to the Washington Post, the former US president made his jaw-dropping pitch, which the paper described as “remarkably blunt and transactional,” at a dinner at his Mar-a-Lago home and club.

In front of more than 20 executives, including from Chevron, Exxon, and Occidental Petroleum, he promised to increase oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, remove hurdles to drilling in the Alaskan Arctic, and reverse new rules designed to cut car pollution. He would also overturn the Biden administration’s decision in January to pause new natural gas export permits which have been denounced as “climate bombs.”

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