A turbine from the Revolution Wind project roughly 15 miles south of the Rhode Island coast rises above the water. As President Donald Trump tries to block the development of additional projects, federal officials announced a deal Monday to pay nearly $1 billion to an energy firm to forfeit its leases for two offshore wind farms. (Photo courtesy of Revolution Wind via the Rhode Island Current) The U.S. government will pay a French energy firm nearly $1 billion to cancel its plans to build a pair of wind farms off the East Coast, the Trump administration announced Monday in its latest move to stymie offshore wind. The French firm TotalEnergies will forfeit its leases for projects off the coasts of New York and North Carolina, with the United States paying $928 million to reimburse what the company initially spent on the leases. Under the deal , TotalEnergies will reinvest that money into oil and gas projects, including a liquefied natural gas export facility in Texas. ...
Alan Armstrong, left, Oklahoma’s newest U.S. senator, participates in a reenactment of his swearing-in at the U.S. Capitol on March 24, 2026, alongside his wife, Shelly Armstrong, and Iowa GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley, president pro tempore of the Senate. (Photo by Shauneen Miranda/States Newsroom) WASHINGTON — Alan Armstrong , a Tulsa businessman, was sworn in Tuesday as Oklahoma’s newest U.S. senator. Armstrong temporarily fills the seat of Markwayne Mullin , who was sworn in as U.S. Department of Homeland Security secretary earlier Tuesday. The Senate on Monday confirmed Mullin’s nomination to lead the agency responsible for carrying out President Donald Trump’s mass deportation agenda. Armstrong was sworn in at the U.S. Capitol just hours after Oklahoma GOP Gov. Kevin Stitt appointed him to the post Tuesday morning at the Oklahoma state Capitol in Oklahoma City. Iowa GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley, who serves as president pro tempore of the Se...