How the wind industry misread Trump

By Benjamin Storrow, Kelsey Tamborrino, Jessie Blaeser | 12/10/2025 06:14 AM EST

Some executives hoped a low-conflict strategy and assistance from GOP moderates would help them survive the president’s second term. Then President Donald Trump went to war.

Photo collage of offshore wind turbines

"Many of us knew that if Trump won, we were dead,” one former wind executive said. But another industry leader expressed surprise at "the level of aggression and opposition that the administration launched on Day One." Illustration by Claudine Hellmuth/POLITICO (source images via AP)

The day after President Donald Trump halted construction of a $5 billion wind project off the New York coast, the nation’s top offshore wind developers gathered for a regularly scheduled strategy session in Washington.

The mid-April meeting quickly became heated.

Michael Brown, an outspoken Scotsman who leads the developer Ocean Winds, expressed anger that the industry’s main trade association would not join a blue-state lawsuit challenging Trump’s freeze on offshore wind permitting. American Clean Power Association CEO Jason Grumet pushed back, saying the industry should preserve its political capital at a time when Congress was gearing up to eliminate former President Joe Biden’s clean energy tax credits.

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The pair “were shouting at one another,” said one person at the meeting, who like most industry figures quoted in this story was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive business and political matters. Another attendee described it as “definitely contentious.” A third called it one of several confrontations among industry members over how to respond to Trump.

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