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U.S. gas prices are climbing fast, and drivers are paying the highest pump prices since 2022 as the Iran war shakes oil markets. Many drivers face wild swings between stations and even from one day to the next. The Energy Information Administration says about half the price covers crude oil, and about 20% goes to refiners. Taxes take nearly 20%. Experts say retailers earn slim margins that get tighter when prices at the pump rise. Oil prices soared when U.S. markets opened Thursday, hours after President Donald Trump's speech on continuing the Iran war in which he asked Americans for patience.

It seems that a country divided on many fronts is finding common ground at the gas pumps. There, the cost of the Iran war is hitting Americans squarely in the wallet and aggravating people across the political spectrum. That was the message from Associated Press interviews Monday with people at gas stations and beyond in five states. The national average gas price was $3.48 a gallon on Monday, up from $2.90 a month ago, before the war, according to tracking by AAA. But in interviews, some owners of electric vehicles expressed renewed gratitude for their vehicle choice as they sit out the sticker shock.