FACT FOCUS: Is inflation a red state vs. blue state issue? It's
increasing no matter how you cut it
[June 06, 2026] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — After cooling slowly in 2024 and 2025, inflation is
rising again, squeezing most Americans' budgets and making it harder to
afford gas, groceries, and other necessities. Inflation reached 3.8% in
April from a year earlier, the highest in three years.
So, how bad is it really? Larry Kudlow, a financial news commentator on
Fox Business, posed that question Wednesday to Kevin Hassett, director
of the National Economic Council, which advises the president on the
economy. Hassett had good news: inflation is actually “on a deep
downward dive,” particularly if you take blue states out of the
equation.
The numbers, however, tell a different story.
Here's a look at the facts.
HASSETT: “Inflation is really out of control in the blue states. If you
take out New York and California the story is radically different. So
these really high costs, high regulatory states are driving inflation as
well.”
THE FACTS: This is false and appears to be based on outdated data.
Inflation is high in all nine of the Census Bureau's national regions
and is driven by rising gas prices stemming from the Middle Eastern
conflict, which have also pushed up air fares. More expensive fuel has
also raised shipping costs, which has lifted grocery prices. Clothing
costs have also shot higher, which may reflect the delayed impact of
President Trump's tariffs.

“It's not a blue state story,” said Omair Sharif, chief economist at
Inflation Insights. “Gas is going up in every state.”
Hassett cited a report from the White House Council of Economic Advisers
that had found modestly higher inflation in blue states. Yet the report
used data from last November, long before the Iran war, which began Feb.
28. Since then soaring gas prices — up more than 40% nationwide,
according to AAA — have erased those discrepancies.
In short, taking blue states out of the equation makes little
difference, as plenty of red states are seeing higher inflation, too.
The Labor Department compiles the most widely-followed inflation gauge,
the consumer price index, and releases the data by region. So, for
example, the Pacific region is made up of mostly so-called blue states,
or those governed by Democrats: California, Washington, Oregon, Hawaii,
and Alaska, and its yearly inflation rate was 3.5% in April — below the
national rate of 3.8%.
The East South Central region is made up of all so-called red states —
governed by Republicans — and its annual inflation rate in April was
4.5%, above the national average. The East South Central is Mississippi,
Alabama, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
Some red states are seeing lower inflation than the national average.
The West South Central region, which is made up of Texas, Oklahoma,
Arkansas, and Louisiana, saw consumer prices rise 3.2% in April from a
year earlier. But before the pandemic that region was seeing inflation
closer to 1% annually, so inflation has gotten worse even there.
It's true that blue states such as California or New York often do have
higher prices overall than red states. For example, gas prices in Texas
averaged $3.72 a gallon Thursday, according to AAA, while they were
$5.98 a gallon in California.
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The per-gallon prices for the various grades of gasoline available
at a gas station are displayed on a sign above the pumps, Sunday,
May 24, 2026, in southeast Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
 But inflation measures price
increases, not levels. And gas prices have jumped in Texas since the
Iran war, just as they have in California. In fact, compared with a
year ago, gas prices have risen nearly 36% in Texas, while they are
up 26% in California.
HASSETT: “It's on a deep downward dive if you look
at the trimmed mean or the core, it's headed right towards the Fed's
target.”
THE FACTS: This is misleading. Core inflation, according to the
consumer price index, has risen this year from an annual rate of
2.5% in January to 2.8% in April, the latest data available. It is
lower than the headline number of 3.8% because the core figure
excludes volatile food and energy prices in an effort to get a
picture of underlying inflation trends. Over time, the headline
figure tends to move to the core, which is why the Federal Reserve
and economists often put more weight on the core.
Using the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge — the personal
consumption expenditures price index, or PCE, which puts less weight
on rental and housing costs and also accounts for substitutions
consumers make in their purchases — annual core inflation also rose
to 3.3% in April, up from 3.1% in January.
“There's no deep dive happening in core inflation anywhere,” Sharif
said.
A White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, pointed
out that core inflation as measured by the CPI is still lower than
it was in January 2025.
The trimmed mean that Hassett mentioned is one of many obscure,
alternative measures, and it has gotten more attention recently
because it has been cited by Kevin Warsh, the new chair of the
Federal Reserve appointed by President Trump. The trimmed mean is
calculated essentially by throwing out many of the largest price
changes, both increases and decreases, in an effort to gauge whether
price increases are spreading more broadly into a wide range of
categories.
Hassett is right that the trimmed mean for the PCE index, as
calculated by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, has declined
slightly since the start of the year, from 2.5% to 2.3%, and is
close to the Fed's 2% target. Yet the president of the Dallas Fed,
Lorie Logan, warned Wednesday that the measure may be misleading
when inflation is surging because of some quirks in the way it is
calculated. It stayed low well into the inflation surge of 2021, for
example.
The Cleveland Fed calculates a separate trimmed mean from the CPI
data, and it recently ticked up to 2.8% from 2.6%.
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