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Gas tax holiday as Trump promises? Not so fast, trucking, construction industries say

5h ago · May 13, 2026 · 3 min read

Why It Matters

President Trump’s proposal for a federal gas tax holiday, intended to ease rising fuel costs for American consumers, is drawing unexpected opposition from Republican-aligned industries — raising questions about whether the idea can survive congressional scrutiny. The debate has direct implications for the Highway Trust Fund, the primary source of federal funding for road construction, highway maintenance, and public transit projects across the country.

What Happened

Trump floated the idea of suspending the federal gas tax earlier this week as gas prices have climbed sharply in the wake of escalating conflict with Iran. The U.S. federal gas tax stands at 18.4 cents per gallon; the diesel tax is 24.4 cents per gallon. Any suspension would require congressional approval, since federal taxation falls exclusively under Congress’s authority.

Republican lawmakers moved quickly to introduce legislation in response to the president’s suggestion. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) announced she would bring forward a bill to pause the gas tax, and Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) introduced legislation that would halt the tax for at least 90 days. However, the proposal has not advanced to a floor vote in either chamber, and significant resistance has emerged from within the president’s own coalition.

Three major trucking organizations — the American Trucking Associations, the Truckload Carriers Association, and the National Tank Truck Carriers — issued a joint statement Monday warning that suspending the tax without a replacement revenue source would drain the Highway Trust Fund and undermine road safety and infrastructure investment nationwide.

The Associated General Contractors of America, a construction industry trade group, was similarly critical. Spokesman Brian Turmail said a gas tax holiday would be “a good way to blow a hole in the collection of revenue for funding highway and transit repairs, but a bad way to help drivers who are affected by higher gas prices.”

By the Numbers

  • $4.50/gallon — current national average for regular gasoline, up roughly 50% since fighting in Iran began February 28
  • $5.64/gallon — current national average for diesel fuel
  • 18.4 cents/gallon — federal gas tax rate that would be suspended under the proposals
  • $10.5 billion — estimated deficit increase from a three-month gas tax pause, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget
  • ~20% — share of global oil supply that normally transits the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has largely blocked

Divided Reactions on Capitol Hill

The gas tax debate does not fall neatly along party lines. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) argued on the Senate floor Tuesday that 18 cents of relief per gallon falls far short of the roughly $1.50 price increase driven by the Iran conflict. “Offering Americans literal pennies on the dollar to cope with skyrocketing gas prices just won’t cut it,” he said.

Some Republicans voiced cautious openness rather than enthusiasm. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) said he could accept a temporary pause but acknowledged the tradeoff for infrastructure funding. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) noted his past opposition to similar proposals — including one floated by former President Biden in 2022 after prices spiked following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — and raised questions about whether savings at the wholesale level actually reach consumers at the pump.

Sen. John Hoeven (R-N.D.) said he would prefer focusing on reopening the Strait of Hormuz, calling it the faster and more substantial path to lower prices. Fuel costs remain a significant driver of broader inflation pressures that have complicated the administration’s economic messaging in recent months.

Zoom Out

Gas tax holiday proposals have surfaced repeatedly during fuel price spikes over the past several years, but have consistently struggled to gain traction due to concerns over Highway Trust Fund solvency. The fund receives no general tax revenue and depends almost entirely on gas and diesel taxes to cover federal commitments to state transportation agencies. Inflation running above 3.8% has intensified pressure on the administration to find near-term relief mechanisms, but fiscal hawks have grown more vocal after the national debt surpassed 100% of GDP earlier this month.

What’s Next

Congressional leaders have signaled willingness to discuss the proposal but have not committed to bringing legislation to the floor. The administration will need to address both the revenue replacement question and the skepticism from key industry allies before the idea can move forward. If no alternative funding mechanism is identified, budget concerns and industry opposition may be enough to stall the proposal despite the president’s backing.

Last updated: May 13, 2026 at 1:32 PM GMT+0000 · Sources available
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