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By Cantona Joseph Published on: March 21, 2026 10:19 (EAT)


The two had a heated exchange at the Nvidia AI conference in Silicon Valley.

An aerial view of the Fermi America data center construction site is shown in Amarillo, Texas, on Dec. 9, 2025. | Ramsay de Give for POLITICO
A confrontation between a Dallas billionaire and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick at a Silicon Valley conference has exposed simmering tensions over an effort to secure financing for a sprawling campus of data centers powered by a private energy grid.
Toby Neugebauer, the CEO and co-founder of Fermi America, became “loud and belligerent” with Lutnick at the Nvidia GTC conference in San Jose, California, on Tuesday as he raised the issue of investment from South Korea in the data center project, according to a witness. Two other people familiar with the dispute agreed with that characterization. All three were granted anonymity to discuss a sensitive issue.
Neugebauer, who has an established relationship with Lutnick and has done business with the secretary’s sons, disputes the description of the encounter as heated but concedes he had a “direct conversation” about what he sees as Lutnick’s interference in Fermi’s planned Donald J. Trump Advanced Energy and Intelligence Campus in West Texas.
“I spoke with the secretary over the fact that we are the only actionable site with Koreans ready to partner and break ground in Amarillo this year, and I’m frustrated with the lack of progress,” he said in a statement Thursday.

The incident provides a glimpse behind the scenes of an effort to develop one of the largest clusters of AI data centers in the country, a project that could cost $60 billion and is linked to President Donald Trump’s global tariffs and efforts to secure foreign direct investment as part of a trade deal with South Korea.
Companies from South Korea are involved with the project and the country has pledged to invest $350 billion in the U.S. Lutnick, as Commerce secretary, will have some oversight over the investments in the trade deal but it’s unclear what, if anything, he or the department has done to interfere with the project.
During their exchange at the tech conference, Neugebauer said “everyone says you’re blocking it,” according to the person who witnessed it. The secretary responded that he didn’t know what the CEO was talking about.
At one point, Lutnick’s security detail decided to intervene and separated the men, according to the witness and the people familiar with the incident. Neugebauer disputes those accounts and says he was merely “passed” to the secretary’s staff.
In his statement to POLITICO, Neugebauer complained about Lutnick though neither he nor Fermi would provide any details about the dispute.
“I made it clear that the secretary’s personal, political optics shouldn’t interfere with making a deal with Korea that overwhelmingly benefited America,” Neugebauer said.
The Commerce Department declined comment and the Embassy of South Korea did not respond to a request to answer questions about the situation.
Fermi’s sprawling, 11-gigawatt energy and AI project would bring nuclear, solar, natural gas and batteries to a dusty plot in the Texas panhandle. The company, which was co-founded by former Trump energy secretary Rick Perry, struck deals with South Korea’s Doosan Enerbility and Hyundai Engineering and Construction to work on nuclear power at the site, called Project Matador.
The facility is expected to produce nuclear power from four Westinghouse AP1000 reactors totaling 4.4 gigawatts of electricity. The first reactor is scheduled to be operational by 2032. Doosan is slated to provide nuclear power plant components and Hyundai will take a lead role building the reactors, Fermi has said.
Trump administration officials have given their approval to the project in discussions with Siemens Energy, helping Fermi secure large gas turbines. In an ad buy over Thanksgiving in the Fox News market serving Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, Fermi pitched Trump and his allies on investing money pledged as part of the U.S.-South Korean trade deal.
“We have driven our 11-GW project all the way to the goal line. But not without resistance from the swamp,” one ad said. “We need a presidential ‘tush push’ to score for America and start nuclear construction in 2026, delivering on President Trump’s promise of a nuclear renaissance.”
Neugebauer, the son of a former Republican congressmember from Texas, said he’s known Lutnick for years, and Fermi has ties to Lutnick’s sons, Kyle and Brandon. The two helped pull together $107.6 million for the project, The New York Times reported in November, citing filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Despite the incident, Neugebauer said he enjoyed the Nvidia conference. “We couldn’t have had a better time at GTC with fantastic meetings all week and have already booked our rooms for next year,” he said.
UN secretary general says he’s cooperating with Trump’s Board of Peace in Gaza but doesn’t want it in Hormuz
In an exclusive interview with POLITICO, António Guterres said the Board is not an effective way to manage crises.Listen

BRUSSELS — United Nations Secretary General António Guterres is defending the U.N.’s role as the world’s multilateral organization for responding in times of crisis, but acknowledges he is cooperating “actively” with President Donald Trump’s rival Board of Peace in Gaza — even though Guterres brands the board “a personal project” of the U.S. president.
In an exclusive interview with POLITICO this week, Guterres said he welcomed the Board’s aim of funding and delivering the basics of a Gaza reconstruction plan to rebuild Palestinian homes and infrastructure. “There is an objective there that was defined, approved by the Security Council, and we are cooperating actively with structures created by the Board of Peace,” Guterres said.
But he questioned the wider ambitions of the organization, which Trump described as an alternative to “failed” international institutions when he launched it in September 2025, declaring himself chairman for life of what he asserted could “prove to be the most consequential international body in history.”
Permanent membership requires a $1 billion contribution. Many key democracies such as the U.K., Canada, France and Germany have stayed away while Russia and China have so far declined to join, leaving membership to a motley group of member states including Belarus and Azerbaijan. In January Trump withdrew an invitation to Canada to join after a spat with America’s northern neighbor.
Guterres said that beyond the Gaza reconstruction plan, he saw no need for Trump’s board. “Everything else now is a personal project of President Trump, in which he has full control of everything,” he noted. “This is not the effective way to address the dramatic problems that we have now. We need to be clear about international law, to be clear about the values of the Charter of the United Nations. That is essential in any peace initiative.”
The remarks came as Guterres visited Brussels during a meeting of the European Council that was largely focused on the Iran war. Asked if he had spoken with Trump since the start of the Iran crisis, Guterres emphatically replied, “No, no, no” — although he said that he speaks to others in the administration, but would not disclose who.
The secretary-general forcefully defended the role of the U.N. in conflicts like the crisis in the Hormuz Strait, suggesting that his organization could be part of a plan to de-escalate attacks and retaliatory strikes and protect the crucial waterway. He cited its brokerage of the Black Sea Initiative, which allowed exports of Ukrainian food and fertilizer via a humanitarian corridor from July 2022. It lasted a year before Russia withdrew its support.
“My main objective is to see if it is possible to create conditions in the Strait of Hormuz similar to what [existed] in the past,” he said, noting that the U.N. is in contact with key actors in the Gulf as well as the European Council.
“Of course, it’s a different context,” he said. “It would be a different solution. But we would like to be useful and we are prepared to manage the system. We have task forces created to be able to do it. But we prefer to work directly with the U.S. and other states.”
Swalwell drops lawsuit against Trump housing official over mortgage fraud allegations
The candidate for California governor said the allegations violated the First Amendment and privacy protections.

California gubernatorial candidate Eric Swalwell speaks at the 2026 California Democratic Party State Convention in San Francisco, Saturday, Feb. 21, 2026. | Jeff Chiu/AP
SACRAMENTO, California — Rep. Eric Swalwell has dropped his lawsuit against Bill Pulte after accusing the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency of weaponizing mortgage fraud investigations to silence opponents.
In the lawsuit he filed in November, Swalwell argued that Pulte, motivated by Swalwell’s criticism of President Donald Trump, acquired the Democrat’s private mortgage records in violation of the First Amendment’s “bedrock prohibition on viewpoint-based retaliation.”
Swalwell, also a candidate for California governor, accused Pulte of combing through private records to silence political opponents.
“There’s a reason the First Amendment — the freedom of speech — comes before all others,” Swalwell said in a statement shortly after filing the lawsuit.
Pulte referred Swalwell to the Department of Justice in November, alleging that the representative had engaged in mortgage and tax fraud related to a home in Washington. Swalwell denied the allegations and asked for his criminal referral to be withdrawn, as well as damages.
The dropping of the suit comes as the gubernatorial candidate’s opponents have questioned his eligibility to run for governor, with rival Tom Steyer accusing Swalwell of living in California “on paper only.”
Swalwell’s residency was the subject of a separate lawsuit filed by conservative filmmaker Joel Gilbert in an attempt to keep Swalwell off the ballot for the governor’s race. That was tentatively struck down on Friday, however, when a Superior Court judge found enough evidence from the court proceedings to presume that Swalwell has lived in the state for the requisite five years.
Pulte did not provide a comment. A Swalwell campaign spokesperson said in a statement, “Pulte threatened a case. We called his bluff. He never brought it. And we just won on the same nonsense issue in California. Case closed.”
Mamdani leaned into his faith during Ramadan — and faced tests along the way
New York City’s first Muslim mayor held regular iftars, weathered faith-based attacks and responded to an ISIS-inspired bombing attempt.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani attended an Eid al-Fitr prayer at Brooklyn’s Prospect Park on March 20, 2026, in New York City marking the end of the Islamic month of Ramadan. | Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images
NEW YORK — Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s first Ramadan in City Hall has put his Muslim identity at the center of New York politics — deepening his connection with supporters while fueling a wave of backlash from critics on the right.
Over the past month, Mamdani has embraced a highly visible public role during the holy month, attending at least 17 iftars across the five boroughs to break the fast that millions of Muslims around the world observe. He held a private dinner with activist Mahmoud Khalil and his family at Gracie Mansion, attended nightly prayers at mosques around the city and concluded his month-long religious observance with an Eid al-Fitr prayer Friday morning in Brooklyn.
Yet the last 30 days have been fraught for the mayor, marred with controversies and threats that thrust his religious identity into the center of public discourse.
Since mid-February, Mamdani has been faced with an ISIS-inspired attack outside Gracie Mansion, backlash over his wife’s controversial social media activity and a public rupture with Palestinian author Susan Abulhawa that drew criticism from his own base. He has also weathered a steady stream of intensifying Islamophobic attacks from Republicans, including Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville and New York City Councilmember Vickie Paladino, who cast him as a threat from within.
“It is not always easy to practice our faith in the city that we know is our home,” Mamdani said at an Eid al-Fitr prayer Friday morning in Brooklyn. “And yet so many here always find a way.”
Mamdani has not retreated from his Muslim identity since becoming mayor. He has instead leaned into it and used his iftars to reinforce a governing style that treats his faith as something to be expressed publicly. That approach has clarified both his appeal and his vulnerabilities. Mamdani made reference to Israel’s war in Gaza during his Eid al-Fitr remarks Friday and has continued to criticize the Jewish state, a stance that energizes parts of his coalition but has intensified pushback from political opponents and unease among many Jewish leaders.
Basil Smikle, a political scientist and former executive director of the New York State Democratic Party, said he believes Mamdani is making a bold choice by embracing his religion in such a public way.
”The mayor doesn’t have to do this, but he seems to have taken on the task of informing New Yorkers of what exactly Islam is and the role it plays in his life,” he said.
Smikle noted he has read the Quran three times and said he believes Mamdani does a good job embracing the scripture’s focus on “speaking directly” when it comes to constituents.
“It may have the effect of demystifying the religion not just for New Yorkers, but for people across the country,” he said. “The other part of the equation is: Can there be backlash? I think there can be, especially with an increase in instances of Islamophobia, but I do think the city will come in defense of its mayor to push back.”
For allies of Mamdani like Ali Najmi, who has known the mayor for more than a decade and co-founded the city’s Muslim Democratic Club — which Mamdani has described as his first political home — the visibility carries deeper meaning.
“To close this sacred month beside the first Muslim mayor is deeply personal,” Najmi wrote in an Instagram post with a photo of himself standing alongside Mamdani at Friday’s prayers. “For so many of us, this is validation, dignity, and a sense that we truly belong.”
During Ramadan, Muslims break their daily fast with an evening prayer and the iftar meal, which is served at sunset.
For Mamdani, these gatherings took on the appearance of both personal observance and political strategy.
“At its core, this was about presence,” a spokesperson from the mayor’s office said in a statement to POLITICO. “Ramadan is a deeply personal time of reflection and discipline, and for the Mayor, observing it while in office meant being in community with New Yorkers who are living that reality every day.”
Though he made a public showing of his faith during Ramadan, Mamdani said during a City Hall iftar with reporters last month that he does not abide by the Muslim custom of praying five times a day. Telling POLITICO he “can’t lie” about it, Mamdani said the only prayer he regularly commits to each week is the Jummah on Fridays.
“My message is that you need not be ashamed of who you are to be a part of this city,” he said at a recent press conference. “You need not feel as if your identity is somehow in tension with being a New Yorker.”
In the past month, Mamdani has hosted iftars at City Hall, Gracie Mansion and elsewhere for city workers, journalists and activists, including a private dinner with Khalil, a pro-Palestinian protest leader. He attended other iftars with firefighters, delivery workers and inmates at Rikers Island, where he prayed and broke fast alongside detainees and staff.
To Councilmember Shahana Hanif, the first Bangladeshi and Muslim woman elected to the New York City Council, the gatherings served as both outreach to working-class constituencies and a visible assertion of faith.
“In a climate of Islamophobia, hate, bias and division, he has really allowed us to feel, one, we matter in the city, that we are protected in the city, and that we can express ourselves and be people of faith,” Hanif said.
It isn’t the first time an elected official has attended iftars and engaged with the Muslim community. But for Mamdani, the public displays of faith occurred regularly during Ramadan and served as a backdrop to a string of threats and Islamophobia. Earlier this month, an anti-Muslim protest organized by far-right agitator Jake Lang — where chants called for deporting all Muslims from the U.S. — ended with an attack by two Muslim teenagers from Pennsylvania who allegedly attempted to detonate improvised explosive devices in the crowd.
In the aftermath, Mamdani addressed reporters alongside NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch, condemning the violence while officials investigated the incident.
“Muslim bigotry is nothing new to me, nor is it anything new for the one million or so Muslim New Yorkers who know this city as our home,” Mamdani said at the time. “While I found this protest appalling, I will not waver in my belief that it should be allowed to happen. Ours is a free society where the right to peaceful protest is sacred.”
Critics seized on the mayor’s initial remarks for not explicitly naming ISIS before prosecutors unsealed charges linking the teens to material support for the terrorist group, generating further backlash. Once the charges were made public, Mamdani explicitly denounced ISIS, clarifying his stance.
“We will not tolerate terrorism or violence in our city,” the mayor said on X following the charges.
Weeks prior to that, Mamdani faced repeated verbal attacks with a focus on his religion. Radio host Sid Rosenberg apologized after calling Mamdani a “Radical Islam cockroach” and a “jihadist,” remarks that drew widespread condemnation.
Councilmember Paladino faced disciplinary action for her remarks on social media, including her assertion that the city was under “foreign occupation” after Mamdani appointed Faiza Ali as his chief immigration officer.
“Does the administration have one single actual American in it?” Paladino said on X.
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The City Council’s Standards and Ethics Committee voted to find Paladino in violation of the council’s anti-discrimination policy, which she claims violates her First Amendment rights. Paladino filed a lawsuit in the New York Supreme Court to block the upcoming hearing.
The criticism during Ramadan did not just come from the right, though.
After news broke that Mamdani’s wife Rama Duwaji provided an illustration for a book co-edited by Abulhawa, who has described Jews as “vermin” and “vampires,” Mamdani distanced himself and his wife from the author and denounced her past statements as “reprehensible.”
In a video responding to the mayor’s comments, Abulhawa said he was not the first to “publically disparage” her remarks about Israel’s war on Gaza and called on him to not condemn those with “no power” despite facing pressure from “billionaire donors.” Mamdani faced backlash from elements of his base for condemning Abulhawa too, with a video of his remarks garnering millions of views and thousands of responses accusing him of abandoning his pro-Palestinian posture.
The mayor continued to speak about Gaza this past month. On St. Patrick’s Day, highlighting Ireland’s “support of Palestinian freedom,” he appeared alongside former Irish President Mary Robinson and drew both praise and criticism for using the holiday to focus on the conflict in the Middle East. Assemblymember Ari Brown, a Republican and frequent critic of Mamdani, interpreted the decision as an attack against Jews.
“He could not resist turning a distinctly Irish moment into another platform for his ideological messaging,” Brown said.
The past month, though, hasn’t reflected a change in Mamdani’s religious practice, but instead a decision to make it more visible.
“The Mayor wanted to model something different, that faith can be a source of strength, connection, and service,” the mayor’s spokesperson said. “And if, in doing so, more people feel seen — that’s a powerful and welcome outcome.”
During his mayoral campaign last year, Mamdani rejected pressure to downplay his faith, calling out opponents like former Gov. Andrew Cuomo and former Mayor Eric Adams for fear-mongering. Mamdani at the time called Cuomo’s behavior “both incredibly disappointing and yet not surprising.”
With that in mind, Hanif said Mamdani’s public-facing approach to his faith can create a new foundation for Muslims to engage in politics.
“He’s stewarding a new generation of how we behave as Muslims, or how we accept our Islam with our identity,” Hanif said.
The states where higher gas prices could shape the midterms
The map of price hikes shows highest increases are mostly in states that lean Republican.

Gasoline prices in Texas are up $1 per gallon since the start of the U.S. war with Iran. | Tony Gutierrez/AP
President Donald Trump stood in front of Congress less than a month ago and boasted about low gas prices. Now he’s presiding over a 30 percent price spike that’s put his party on the defensive.
Gasoline prices are up in every state since the U.S. and Israel launched attacks on Iran at the end of February, according to AAA’s average fuel prices. Those with particularly competitive races like Arizona, Georgia, Wisconsin and Michigan have seen price jumps of at least $1 per gallon.
After a suite of state and local elections last year steered the bulk of campaign rhetoric toward affordability for both parties, the president’s decisions risk muddling GOP messaging for weeks, if not months. And with primaries underway, the rise in prices may drive a wedge between Trump and down-ballot Republicans.
“[Republican candidates] have to acknowledge what’s going on, and they have to make sure that they’re not seen as out of touch with voters on this,” said Texas-based GOP consultant Brendan Steinhauser, whose clients have included Sen. John Cornyn and Rep. Dan Crenshaw. “Some of them are moving with some trepidation about not talking about the war, and they don’t want to be seen as necessarily opposing the president or being critical of him. So I think a lot of the conversations have been more quiet.”
The price of regular-grade gasoline averaged $3.91 across the U.S. on Friday, nearly $1 higher than when Trump celebrated low gas prices in his State of the Union speech on Feb. 24, and it’s unclear when they might settle as the conflict levels energy infrastructure in the region. Brent crude oil, a global benchmark for the oil industry, has been traded at above $100 a barrel for the past week, up from around $71 per barrel when Trump gave his State of the Union.
The White House is insisting the surge in fuel costs is a temporary issue that the president’s larger energy agenda will make up for.
“President Trump has been clear that these are short-term disruptions and that Americans will see oil and gas prices drop rapidly again once the necessary objectives of Operation Epic Fury have been achieved and the regime’s capabilities are neutralized,” White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said in a statement. “President Trump’s energy dominance agenda saved American families hundreds of dollars at the pump last year, and he will continue to double down on these successful efforts to lower prices in the weeks and months ahead.”
Trump, she said, is “committed to maintaining Republicans’ majority in Congress.”
Still, while Republicans have broadly expressed support for the Trump administration’s military action, most GOP incumbents in competitive races have not made any public statements on gas prices since the strikes began.
Some embattled lawmakers have proposed policy changes that would address gas costs. Rep. Zach Nunn (R-Iowa) is pushing a bill that would allow year-round sales of E15 gas, which mixes gasoline with higher levels of ethanol to reduce costs. And Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.) introduced legislation to boost domestic energy production and “bring down energy costs” — though he has attributed the higher costs to New York’s climate policy.
The setback for Republicans’ affordability agenda has emboldened Democratic lawmakers.
Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) told MSNOW that high diesel prices hurt American farmers in particular. Diesel, which is critical for transportation and shipping goods, averaged $5.16 a gallon on Friday, up from $3.75 before the war.
Rep. Vicente Gonzalez (D-Texas), whose district is more competitive following Texas’ redistricting, took the high gas prices as an opportunity to campaign on “making life more affordable.”
“Instead of this Administration working to lower prices for our families, they initiated a war with Iran that has already cost American lives and increased prices at the pump,” Gonzalez posted on X.
Especially in large states such as Texas, the effects of gas prices on voters isn’t even: The cost of regular gas varied from about $3.56 around Gonzalez’s south Texas district to $4 in the western counties of the state and nearly down to $3 in parts of the panhandle, according to AAA.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration, an independent statistical agency of the Department of Energy, increased its price forecast for crude oil for the rest of the year following the U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran. The EIA estimated gas will cost an average of $3.34 this year — which nearly every state has already surpassed. The EIA’s forecast is up 15 percent from its estimate of $2.91 in February, prior to the war.
State lawmakers in both parties have proposed gas tax holidays in response to rising costs. Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis on Thursday rejected a statewide gas tax pause, despite previously enacting one in 2022, when prices rose after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
As part of a series of actions to bring down energy prices, Trump announced on Wednesday a temporary pause of the Jones Act, giving foreign cargo ships access to U.S. ports in an effort to boost fuel supplies.
Vice President JD Vance told reporters at an event in Michigan on Wednesday the Trump administration was fighting to bring down gasoline and diesel prices. He echoed the White House view that the spikes would be temporary.
“We promise that when this conflict draws to a close, when this operation draws to a close, we’re going to see those energy prices come back down to reality,” Vance said. “Because that’s what the president promised to do.”
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