Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Biden heading to Saudi Arabia to beg for oil, says David Eisner

“Global Perspectives” with Ellie Cohanim and guest David Eisner

The United States was on the path to energy independence until U.S. President Joe Biden took office, according to David Eisner, who served as assistant secretary for management at the Treasury Department under former President Donald Trump. Now, he says, the president needs to beg countries like Saudi Arabia for oil.

In a conversation with Ellie Cohanim on this week’s “Global Perspectives,” Eisner explained how Biden, during his first weeks in office, placed a moratorium on leases for energy companies to explore and produce fuel.

“There’s no plan for lifting that moratorium,” said Eisner.

“The president is going to Saudi Arabia to beg for oil there,” he continued. “They’ve made overtures toward Venezuela. The fact of the matter is, in America, we produce cleaner energy than anywhere else in the world. So to buy energy somewhere else, to import it, is creating more carbon gas and environmental problems than anything we could do in this country.”

Eisner said that in 30 years, some 50 percent of America’s energy will be electric, wind or solar.

“But that will take 30 years, so why punish our people for the next 30 years?”

“The Iranian regime executed a 19-year-old for demanding democracy,” stated Sen. John Fetterman. “I stand with his memory and the thousands of other young Iranians.”
More than 70,000 Americans have returned to the United States from the Middle East since the Iran conflict began on Feb. 28.
“If this thing is growing, this inauthentic account is going to deceive more people,” Rep. Chris Smith told JNS. “Especially overseas, where there’s a language barrier or something.”
“We are now part of a process at the International Court of Justice initiated by Nicaragua,” Berlin said. “We have decided to focus on this process.”
“No more weapons to support an illegal war,” Sanders wrote on Thursday, setting up a vote that will largely gauge Democratic support for Israel.
“We are deeply grateful for speaker Julie Menin’s leadership, her presence and for standing up against antisemitism when it truly matters,” David Greenfield, CEO of the Met Council, told JNS.