Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

$
John McCain
John McCain
stated on June 17, 2008 in a speech on energy in Houston:

Obama “wants a windfall profits tax on oil to go along with the new taxes he also plans for coal and natural gas.”

Mostly True
By Bill Adair
June 18, 2008

Yes, Obama wants to tax windfall profits

As the candidates jockey over energy policies and offshore drilling, Sen. John McCain has been criticizing Sen. Barack Obama for wanting to raise taxes.

“He wants a windfall profits tax on oil, to go along with the new taxes he also plans for coal and natural gas,” McCain said in a June 18, 2008, speech in Houston. “If the plan sounds familiar, it’s because that was President Jimmy Carter’s big idea too — and a lot of good it did us.”

Indeed, McCain is right that Obama supports a windfall profits tax, which would be levied on oil companies to capture some of their profits from rising prices.

“I’ll make oil companies like Exxon pay a tax on their windfall profits, and we’ll use the money to help families pay for their skyrocketing energy costs and other bills,” Obama said in a speech June 9.

A windfall tax — actually an excise tax imposed on the difference between the market price of oil and an adjusted base price — was enacted in 1980 but repealed in 1988. By then, oil prices had dropped, it was generating little or no revenue and there were concerns that it made the United States more dependent on foreign oil. Many Democrats want to bring it back to discourage oil companies from raising prices.

We couldn’t find many details about Obama’s windfall-profits proposal except that he would use it for
the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, which helps the poor pay their heating and cooling bills.

As for the other part of McCain’s claim, that Obama wants new taxes for coal and natural gas, the details are more sketchy.

The McCain campaign cites a February 2008 interview of Obama with

San Antonio Express-News

columnist Carlos Guerra. In that interview, Obama first answered a question about funding sources for education. Guerra then asked, “Have you considered other funding sources, say taxing emerging energy forms, for example, say a penny per kilowatt hour on wind energy?”

Obama replied: “Well, that’s clean energy, and we want to drive down the cost of that, not raise it. We need to give them subsidies so they can start developing that. What we ought to tax is dirty energy, like coal and, to a lesser extent, natural gas. But I think that the real way to fund education is for local communities to step up and say this is important to us. There are no shortcuts.”

We couldn’t find any other references to new taxes on coal or natural gas on the Obama’s campaign Web site, although we found several items where Obama wants incentives for clean coal.

Tommy Vietor, a spokesman for the campaign, said Obama was referring to his proposal for a cap-and-trade system for global warming.

Still, it’s clear from the context that the coal and natural gas comment was more an aside than an announcement of a major new tax proposal. But regardless, Obama said what he said: “What we ought to tax is dirty energy, like coal and, to a lesser extent, natural gas.”

He may not have a detailed position paper on it, but it seems to be an overall statement of his beliefs and the Obama campaign did not dispute that he said it.

So we find McCain’s claim to be Mostly True.

Our Sources

McCain campaign, Remarks by John McCain on Energy Security, June 17, 2008

Congressional Research Service, The Crude Oil Windfall Profit Tax of the 1980s: Implications for Current Energy Policy, March 9, 2006

Obama campaign, Remarks of Senator Barack Obama, Raleigh, N.C., June 9, 2008

Republican National Committee, Obama Tax Backgrounder, June 9, 2008

San Antonio Express-News, Q&A; with Sen. Barack Obama, Feb. 19, 2008

E-mail from Tommy Vietor, Obama campaign spokesman, June 18, 2008

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Bill Adair
John Kitzhaber
stated on July 18, 2014 a campaign debate
Oregon "is the most trade-dependent state in the nation"
False
Donald Rumsfeld
stated on February 17, 2013 an op-ed in the "Washington Post"
Says wrestling was a favorite sport of Abraham Lincoln.
True
Rick Perry
stated on January 8, 2012 a Republican debate in New Hampshire.
Says President Barack Obama "is a socialist."
Pants on Fire!
C.W. Bill Young
stated on February 20, 2010 a speech to Pinellas County Republicans.
The Democratic health care plan is a "government takeover of our health programs."
Pants on Fire!
Barack Obama
stated on January 27, 2010 his State of the Union address
The "pay-as-you-go law ... was a big reason why we had record surpluses in the 1990s."
Half-True
Dick Cheney
stated on December 30, 2009 a statement to Politico.
President Obama "doesn't ... want to admit we're at war."
Pants on Fire!
Barack Obama
stated on September 20, 2009 an interview on Meet the Press
"Mathematically, the White Sox can still get in the playoffs."
True

Obama says White Sox can still make the playoffs

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on January 7, 2026 a press briefing

stated on January 14, 2026 a statement

Social Media
stated on February 14, 2026 social media posts



stated on January 20, 2026 an op-ed


Donald Trump
stated on February 3, 2026 remarks in the Oval Office


Social Media
stated on February 8, 2026 social media posts





Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
stated on stated on November 17, 2025 in remarks at George Washington University:

Donald Trump
stated on February 2, 2026 an interview with Dan Bongino