Governor Of California PANICS After Chevron CEO EXPOSES His Brutal Text Response!
The Digital Guillotine: How Newsom’s Text Message Shattered California’s Energy Empire
The 145-year alliance between California and Chevron didn’t die a natural death; it was executed via text message. As revealed in a series of leaked communications first published by the Wall Street Journal in February 2025, the corporate exodus of an industrial titan was triggered by a digital “slap” from Governor Gavin Newsom. When Chevron CEO Mike Worth reached out in July 2024 to discuss the company’s future, the response from the Governor’s phone was as cold as it was calculated: “I do not need to talk about it. I am good.”
This wasn’t just a breakdown in manners; it was a total abandonment of leadership. While Newsom was busy using “melting face emojis” to mock the departure of 2,000 high-paying jobs, the physical and economic security of the Golden State was quietly siphoned away to Texas. The hypocrisy is staggering: a state that claims to be a global beacon of innovation and economic power has been reduced to a playground for a governor who treats $200 billion industries like annoying group chats.
The Rise of the Energy Island
California has intentionally transformed itself into an “energy island.” By mandating unique fuel blends (CARBOB) that no other state produces and refusing to connect to the national pipeline network, Sacramento has created a hostage situation for its own residents. When refinery capacity drops, there is no cavalry coming from Texas or the Midwest. Instead, we wait weeks for tankers from Asia to arrive, paying a “mystery surcharge” that has cost Californians $59 billion over the last decade.
The stats tell the story of a system being strangled by its own regulators. In 2022, refining margins—the gap between what oil costs and what gas sells for—tripled in a single month while crude prices were actually falling.
Date
CA Gas Price (Avg)
National Gas Price (Avg)
Gap
October 2022
$6.43
$3.80
**$2.63**
December 2025
$4.34
$2.94
**$1.40**
The Refinery Domino Effect
The departure of Chevron’s headquarters was the first domino. The real devastation followed in late 2024 and 2025, as Phillips 66 and Valero announced the closure of major refineries in Los Angeles and Benicia. Together, these shutdowns represent a 17.5% loss of the state’s total refining muscle.
Sacramento’s response was SBX1-2, a performative “price gouging” law that gave the state the power to cap refiner profits. But reality has a way of correcting socialist fantasies. By October 2025, the California Energy Commission was forced to issue an urgent memo recommending a five-year pause on enforcing those very caps. Why? Because the threat of government-imposed profit margins was driving the remaining refineries out of the state even faster than the lawsuits were.
The $10 Gallon Looming
The cost of Newsom’s “digital door slam” is currently being calculated at every gas station in the state. Analysts now warn that after the Valero shutdown in 2026, the average price of gas could hit $8.43 per gallon, with “extreme scenarios” pushing it toward $12.
The irony is complete: Newsom, the “climate warrior,” recently signed a cap-and-trade extension and authorized 2,000 new oil drilling permits in Kern County in a desperate, last-minute attempt to prevent a total energy collapse. He is freezing the price gouging rules he once championed because he realized too late that you can’t regulate an industry into non-existence without also regulating your citizens into poverty. California’s energy future didn’t vanish because of a “Green New Deal”; it vanished because the “fox guarding the hen house” decided to burn the house down to prove a point in a text message.