LAST WIRE SPECIAL REPORTGas Prices, Iran, and the Narrative Gap: Why Today Isn’t 2022 (Even If It Feels Like It)The Last WireREAD THIS BEFORE YOU BLAME TODAY’S GAS PRICES ON CURRENT POLICY:Gas just pushed back over $4 a gallon, and suddenly the same political playbook is back.
Blame the White House. Blame the moment. Blame the crisis.
But here’s the problem: we’ve already seen worse… and not that long ago.
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📊 The Actual Numbers (No Spin)• Current U.S. average (April 2026): ~
$4.05–$4.12 per gallon (
Source)
• April 2022 average: ~
$4.11 per gallon (Source)On the surface, that looks the same.
It isn’t.
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📉 The Inflation Adjustment (This Is Where The Narrative Breaks)Between 2022 and 2026, cumulative inflation runs roughly
15–18%.
So:
• $4.11 in 2022 →
~$4.75 to $4.85 in 2026 dollars • Today’s price →
~$4.05Real difference: 👉 Today is roughly
$0.70–$0.80 cheaper per gallon than the same time in 2022, adjusted for purchasing power.
That’s not opinion. That’s math.
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🌍 “It’s Iran”… Yes, But That’s Not New EitherCurrent headlines point to the Iran conflict as the driver of rising prices.
They’re not wrong.
Recent reporting shows:
- War-related disruptions have pushed gas back above $4
- Oil supply routes are under pressure
- Prices spiked rapidly in response to geopolitical risk
The Washington PostBut here’s what’s missing:
👉
2022 had a bigger geopolitical shock• Russia–Ukraine war
• Global sanctions on a top oil exporter
• Supply chain breakdown still recovering from COVID
• Demand snapping back all at once
Result?
👉 Multiple months in 2022 ranked among the highest gas prices ever recorded, with April already over $4 and June near $5
LendingTreeSo yes, Iran is pushing prices up now.
But the 2022 shock was objectively larger.
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💵 The Part Politicians Avoid: The Dollar ChangedBetween 2020 and 2022, the system absorbed:
• Massive Federal Reserve liquidity injections
• Near-zero interest rates
• Trillions in stimulus spending
• Rapid expansion of money supply
That matters because gas isn’t just priced on oil… it’s priced in dollars.
And those dollars were being diluted.
So when gas hit $4–$5 in 2022, it wasn’t just scarcity.
It was
scarcity layered on top of a weaker currency.
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🧾 Political Messaging vs. Economic RealityYou’re now seeing two familiar political narratives collide again:
Kamala Harris emphasizes consumer strain:
“Prices remain too high for many families… including what they are paying at the pump.”
Ro Khanna pushes back on direct blame:
“Presidents don’t set the price of gas… these are global markets.”
Both statements are technically true.
But neither tells the full story.
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🔑 The Reality CheckHere’s what actually holds up under scrutiny:
• Gas prices today are
lower than 2022 in real terms • The current Iran conflict is
raising prices—but from a lower baseline • 2022 was a
larger systemic shock • Inflation changed the value of every dollar comparison
• And no president directly controls global oil pricing
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Final WordGas prices are being used… again, as a political weapon.
But the numbers don’t cooperate with the narrative.
Yes, prices are elevated.
Yes, geopolitical conflict matters.
But when you adjust for inflation and compare like-for-like:
👉
Americans were paying more for gas in 2022 than they are today.That’s the part that rarely makes the headline.
— Gonzo