On Saturday morning, Donald Trump announced on Twitter that he’d spoken to Saudi Arabia’s King Salman, who agreed to increase oil production because gas prices are “to [sic] high.”
The good news is, unlike many of the other phone conversations the president claims to have participated in, this call actually occurred. The bad news is, officials in Saudi Arabia quickly made clear that the Saudi leader didn’t exactly say what Trump claimed he said.
Saudi officials told reporters that the kingdom made no specific promises to the American president, and as a practical matter, the Saudis probably couldn’t boost production as much as Trump claimed anyway. Complicating matters, it’s an open question as to whether — and just how much — these efforts would lower prices at the pump.
Yesterday, the White House backed away from the president’s published claim.
The leader of Saudi Arabia promised President Donald Trump that he can raise oil production if needed and the country has 2 million barrels per day of spare capacity, the White House said on Saturday, rowing back on an earlier Trump tweet that appeared to suggest the Saudis had agreed to boost output by that amount.
Trump said Saturday that he had received assurances from King Salman bin Adulaziz Al Saud that the kingdom will increase oil production, “maybe up to 2,000,000 barrels” in response to rising prices. Saudi Arabia acknowledged the call took place, but mentioned no production targets.
In other words, according to the White House’s version, there was some confusion on Trump’s part between the Saudis’ spare capacity and the Saudis’ production capacity.
That said, there’s a reason the American president is probably feeling a little antsy about the whole subject.
According to the Trump administration’s own figures, average U.S. gas prices reached a four-year high in June, and as we recently discussed, that creates a possible political issue for the White House.
It’s important to acknowledge a basic truth: in general, presidents have limited influence over what American consumers pay at the pump for a global commodity. When Barack Obama took office, for example, gas prices were collapsing, not because of any policies the Democratic president had implemented, but because the international economy was in freefall. Recessions depress economic activity, which lessens the demand for fuel, and pushes prices lower.
Similarly, as Obama’s economic agenda pulled the nation out of the Great Recession, gas prices climbed throughout his first term. Republicans howled, but the trend was entirely predictable, and there wasn’t much of anything the White House could do about it.
The trouble for Trump, however, is three-fold.









