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With all the attention around gas prices these days and their connection to an ongoing war with Iran that shows no signs of abating—not to mention midterm elections in the fall—it’s not terribly surprising that the federal government might want to ease public concerns about affordability. What is surprising is the way in which it’s chosen to do that: by promoting a fuel chain nobody’s heard of before, that’s popped up with a supposed 25 locations around South Jersey and the greater Philadelphia area. Oh, and it’s called the “Freedom Fuel Network.”
The White House account on X introduced the nation to the Freedom Fuel Network on Tuesday, advertising $3.47 per gallon for regular. The company’s connection to the federal government is unclear. A White House spokesperson reportedly told CBS News that Freedom Fuel is privately owned, that “the Trump administration is not involved with the company and is not subsidizing the gas stations,” and that, “the stations can offer lower prices by reducing their profit margins.”
The President himself also posted about Freedom Fuel days earlier, saying that, “a VERY smart Retailer, located throughout the Northeast, is stepping up,” while sharing a clearly AI-generated image of one of the stores. On the flip side, that X post about the new chain literally reads, “President Trump is leading the charge to lower gas prices this summer,” so who can say.
What we do know is that the Freedom-branded stations went by different names up until very recently. One visited by the Philadelphia Inquirer in Dresher, PA is still listed as a Sunoco on Google Maps. Another one in Bristol has a Freedom Fuel banner loosely draped on an overhang that clearly belonged to a Valero in a past life.
Pennsylvania Department of State
Searching “Freedom Fuel” in the PA Department of State’s official business directory turns up six entities with similar names, though four of them were formed between 1917 and 1998, one was started in 2023 but resides near Lake Erie, and another was filed this past March. That seems promising, until you notice that it’s actually Canadian.
All this is to say that plenty of questions surrounding the provenance of the Freedom Fuel Network and how it’s able to offer such low prices still remain. Many respondents to the original X post theorized that the business is owned by the government and/or has commercial ties to the President, and is artificially chopping off 30 cents because it can; these individuals also didn’t hesitate to seize upon the socialist implications of such an arrangement. Maybe we’ll get an answer, or maybe we won’t. Maybe all Freedom Fuel stations will resume their regularly scheduled corporate programming in short order, like Spirit Halloweens for cars.
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Backed by a decade of covering cars and consumer tech, Adam Ismail is a Senior Editor at The Drive, focused on curating and producing the site’s slate of daily stories.
