Two weeks ago, the Trump administration rolled back lightbulb energy-efficiency standards, which, as we’ve discussed, represented a pointless step backwards for U.S. energy policy.
As The Hill’s report on this noted, the new rule “will increase U.S. electricity use by 80 billion kilowatt hours over the course of a year, roughly the amount of electricity needed to power all households in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, according to an analysis by the Appliance Standards Awareness Project.”
Last night, at a campaign rally in New Mexico, the president defended the policy by emphasizing the importance of his personal vanity.
“I wanted incandescent light. I wanted to look better, OK? I wanted to pay less money to look better.”
For now, let’s put aside the fact that energy-efficient lightbulbs, in the long run, end up costing consumers less money. Instead, let’s note that Trump has been talking to the point of preoccupation about lightbulbs and his perceptions about his personal appearance.
Here he was, for example, at a campaign rally in North Carolina last week:









