The war on coal is officially OVER, folks.
In a triumphant White House ceremony that would have made the Obama-Biden regime's EPA bureaucrats weep into their solar panels, President Donald J. Trump signed a historic executive order directing the Department of Defense to purchase power directly from America's coal plants – and was honored by the very miners whose livelihoods he's fighting to protect.
The Commander-in-Chief was presented with the title of "Undisputed Champion of Beautiful, Clean Coal" by the Washington Coal Club, a fitting recognition for a president who has done more for American energy workers in one term than the previous administration did in four years of pushing job-killing green fantasies.
While Joe Biden spent his presidency genuflecting before climate activists and trying to regulate coal out of existence, President Trump is doing what real leaders do: putting American workers and national security FIRST.
"We have a President who, more than any other, deeply understands the importance of coal in supporting the future of this nation," declared Peabody Energy CEO James Grech, speaking for thousands of miners across the country.
And he's right. This executive order isn't just about energy policy – it's about American sovereignty. When our military bases are powered by reliable, affordable American coal instead of depending on unreliable renewables or foreign energy sources, that's called WINNING.
In a move that sent shockwaves through the climate-industrial complex, the TVA – now with Trump-appointed board members who actually understand how electricity works – reversed course on plans to shutter coal plants. Instead of bowing to the green lobby's demands, they're recommitting to the energy source that has powered American greatness for generations.
Senator Bill Hagerty put it perfectly: "@POTUS doing a great job and TVA is heeding the call to preserve and expand capacity, focusing on American competitiveness."
That's what leadership looks like. Not endless regulations. Not virtue-signaling about carbon emissions while China builds a new coal plant every week. RESULTS.
Perhaps the most powerful moment came when Indiana coal worker Kayla Blackford took the microphone and reminded Washington what this fight is really about.
Source: Next News Network