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WV Power Bills Soar Above Mortgages as Trump Rate‑Cut Pledge Falters

An Associated Press investigation from Rainelle, West Virginia, details how winter 2025–26 electric bills in one of the nation’s poorest, most energy‑rich states have surged so high that some now exceed residents’ mortgages, directly undercutting President Donald Trump’s repeated promise to halve Americans’ power bills within his first 12 to 18 months back in office. The piece anchors individual cases — like a woman on a fixed income facing a $940 February bill despite aggressive conservation — in nationwide data showing February electricity prices up 4.8% and piped natural gas up 10.9% year‑over‑year, outpacing general inflation even before Iran‑war‑driven energy spikes. It reports that rising fuel costs, extreme weather, and utilities’ spending on aging infrastructure are converging with a new wave of requested rate hikes that nonprofit PowerLines estimates could hit more than 80 million U.S. customers. The story also cites a March AP‑NORC poll finding 35% of adults are extremely or very worried about affording electricity in coming months and notes that power prices have already become a live campaign issue in recent governor’s races and are expected to loom large in the 2026 midterms. On social media, West Virginians are posting screenshots of shocking bills, demanding explanations from regulators and Trump, and questioning why a state that exports energy is saddling its own residents with crushing utility costs.

Energy Prices and Utilities Donald Trump Economic Promises

📌 Key Facts

  • A Rainelle, West Virginia resident on a fixed income received a $940.08 electric bill for February 2026, more than her monthly check and higher than her mortgage.
  • The Labor Department’s Consumer Price Index shows U.S. residential electricity prices rose 4.8% and piped natural gas 10.9% in February 2026 compared with a year earlier, outpacing overall inflation.
  • A PowerLines analysis cited by AP estimates new gas and electric rate‑increase requests could affect more than 80 million U.S. customers, while a March AP‑NORC poll found 35% of adults are extremely or very concerned about affording electricity in the next few months.

📊 Relevant Data

In West Virginia, 37% of households are considered energy-burdened, meaning they spend more than 6% of their household income on electricity and other utilities.

As power costs spike, they struggle to pay the bills — Mountain State Spotlight

Nationally, Black households spend 43% more of their income on energy compared to White households, with Hispanic households spending 20% more.

Understanding Energy Burden: Why Some Communities Pay More for Power — Initiative for Energy Justice

West Virginia's high electricity bills are driven by reliance on coal-fired power plants, which are more expensive to operate than local wind and solar alternatives.

Why are West Virginia power bills so high? — Ohio River Valley Institute

The 2026 U.S.-Iran war has contributed to U.S. gas prices rising above $5 per gallon in states like California, with broader impacts on electricity and natural gas costs.

Economic impact of the 2026 Iran war — Wikipedia

After controlling for socio-economic factors, Black households in the U.S. still bear an additional $1.6 billion annually in energy expenditures compared to similar White households.

Racial disparities in the energy burden beyond socio-economic factors — Energy Economics

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April 09, 2026