In a time of war with Iran, Americans unite in aggravation over sticker
shock at the gas pump
[March 10, 2026] By
HANNAH FINGERHUT, MIKE HOUSEHOLDER, MICHAEL SCHNEIDER, MICHAEL CATALINI
and BILL BARROW
DE SOTO, Iowa (AP) — Standing alongside his son’s Ford pickup truck at a
central Iowa gas station off Interstate 80, Francisco Castillo was not
happy.
He had voted for President Donald Trump in the last election. He
believed Trump had strengthened the economy in his first term, and he
wanted more of that.
“I thought that he was going to bring some of those things back,” said
Castillo, a 43-year-old factory worker. And now? “He said he was going
to bring gas down, but the war in Iran is now making everything worse.”
It seems a country divided on so many fronts is finding common ground in
pain at the pump, where the cost of the Iran war is hitting Americans
squarely in the wallet and aggravating people across the political
spectrum.
For Castillo and many others filling their tanks on Monday at gas
stations in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Florida, North Carolina and Iowa, it
was a reminder that politicians’ promises aren’t going to pay the bills.
"They do what benefits them,” Castillo said. “I have to go to work every
day no matter what.”
Some are optimistic that the sticker shock will be short-lived. Others
blame corporate interests rather than the president. Electric vehicle
owners are especially grateful about their decision as they cruise past
gas stations with escalating prices.
The national average gas price was $3.48 a gallon on Monday, up from
$2.90 a month ago, before the war, according to tracking by AAA.

The higher prices are a reminder of how Trump has veered from his
campaign promises. Not only were Americans embroiled in a new war
overseas, they were paying for it every time they filled up their tanks.
Trump insisted the conflict was worth it.
“We’re putting an end to all of this threat once and for all, and the
result will be lower oil prices, oil and gas prices for American
families," he said at a news conference Monday. The war, he said, is
"just an excursion into something that had to be done.”
Robert Coon from Omaha, Nebraska, filled up on his way to Ames, Iowa.
Though not a Trump voter, he believed the strikes in Iran needed to
happen.
Even so, he fears U.S. involvement is not going to go the way he wants,
which is “in, out, over.”
A Quinnipiac poll conducted over the weekend found about half of
registered voters oppose the U.S. military action against Iran while
about 4 in 10 support it. The vast majority of Democrats were against it
(89%), the vast majority of Republicans for it (85%) and independents
against it (60%).
Overall, three-quarters were concerned about the war raising gas and oil
prices.
In Florida, a gas guzzler keeps rolling
For now, surging prices aren't keeping Ray Albrecht from hauling his
32-foot (11 meter) camper on his Silverado pickup truck around the
country as he attended motorcycle festivals like Bike Week in Florida’s
Daytona Beach.
However, he said he would stop traveling if the price reached $5 a
gallon since he only gets 8 miles per gallon with his truck and camper.
He stopped at a Speedway gas station off Interstate 4 in Winter Park,
Florida, paying $3.59 per gallon for half a tank to keep him rolling
toward his home in Wisconsin.
“I’ve been pretty grateful that the gas prices have been really
reasonable” at least until the last week, said Albrecht, 67, who
identified as an independent voter.

At the same gas station, Republican-leaning Tyler Nepple, 23, said the
price of gas for his Toyota Tacoma may shape his vote in the midterm
elections this fall but won't change his driving habits.
“You’ve just got to fill it up and bite the bullet and hope that the
prices go back down — that's all I can really do," said Nepple, who runs
a startup in the Orlando, Florida, area. “I still have to get from point
A to point B, and I need gas to do that.”
A retiree cuts back in Pennsylvania
Kathryn Price Engelhard, 70, gassed up her Subaru Forester at a Wawa in
Morrisville, Pennsylvania, in the Philadelphia suburbs. A retired
nonprofit executive director and “strong Democrat,” she said she had to
stop at over a half a tank because she’s on a fixed income. Last week,
she paid only $30 to top herself off.
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Francisco Castillo stands next to his son's Ford F-150 after filling
up, Monday, March 9, 2026, at a gas station in De Soto, Iowa. (AP
Photo/Hannah Fingerhut)
 Similarly, she cut her order for
home heating oil by half because that cost is up, too. “I look at
the prices of oil in the past and the stupid war, how did we — how
did anybody — think that that was not going to impact oil?" she
asked. “Of course it’s impacting oil.”
In Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania, Vivian Knight, 53, is hoping her
fill-up last week will last her a month. She is a former
exterminator out on disability. “If I had to go to work or something
like that, gas prices would be ridiculous,” she said.
Speaking of Trump, she said “he kind of starts some problems that
really don’t need to be started,” and she puts the Iran war in that
category.
The saga will have no effect on how Joey Perillo, 74, will vote in
November.
“The gas price could have gone down to two cents a gallon and I’d
vote against him,” said the volunteer firefighter, retired actor and
political independent from Yardley, Pennsylvania.
In Michigan, gratitude for electric cars
In the Detroit suburb of Livonia, Anthony Gooden, 57, sized up the
plight of gas-powered vehicle owners while waiting for his Chevy
Equinox EV to charge at a station.
“Whoa, they're going through it right now,” said Gooden, 57, from
nearby Redford Township. “And it's only getting worse.”
Gooden ditched his internal combustion engine vehicle over a year
ago and said days like these reinforce that decision. “You’re
happier now,” he said. “No comparison.”
In Ann Arbor, Michigan, Elvana Hammoud, 55, a diversity strategist,
drives a Mach-E electric SUV as well as a Ford Raptor truck that
costs $100 to fill up when gas is over $3. It's an easy choice which
to use more now.
“I mostly drive the EV, especially to work because I have a long
commute,” she said. The Raptor is for snowy days, short errands or
when moving something big. ”I used it more frequently just for fun
when gas prices were lower.”

Trump has put up a number of roadblocks to rapid expansion of
electric vehicles in favor of policies promoting gasoline-powered
ones. Among them, his tax and spending bill passed by Congress last
year eliminated federal tax credits that saved buyers up to $7,500
off new and used EV purchases.
In North Carolina, worries about gouging
Kevin Kertesz, 65, filled his pickup at a Shell station in Graham,
North Carolina, where unleaded started at $3.34 per gallon, up from
$2.59 in the area last week.
The Republican retiree asserted that “everyone who is selling fuel
for these elevated prices is price gouging, and there’s nothing we
can do about it because we all have to have gasoline to keep
driving.”
Ken Shuttlesworth, a 70-year-old IT manager from Graham who
described himself as an independent Democrat, said he can absorb
higher gas costs but worries about his children and grandchildren
and others who live closer to the financial margins.
Trump, he said, should have consulted Congress and had a more public
discussion before taking the country to war.
“We have somebody who doesn’t follow the policy," he said. "He
follows his instincts.”
___
Fingerhut reported from Iowa, Householder from Michigan, Schneider
from Florida, Catalini from Pennsylvania and Barrow from Georgia.
Associated Press writers Calvin Woodward and Linley Sanders
contributed.
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