It's pretty obvious for anybody with brains that whatever is causing the rates to rise was baked into the system before Trump took office. Him shooting his mouth off too much makes for an easy target of TDSers. Every new home and business solar installation means fewer ratepayers paying for the cost of the distribution infrastructure, which cannot be scaled back. Every commercial solar and windmill installation and big data center puts more strain on the creaky infrastructure. I don't think Trump can bring the rates down much because the distribution now costs more than the generation. In my January bill, the power itself was a bit under half the total.
I'm saying this as one of the leeches with home solar, getting a free ride most of the year.
With what's happened to my home insurance I'm numb and don't see a 15% increase as a crisis. What I'm really wondering about is the Medicare Part D premiums for 2026. The part D premiums were set to skyrocket in 2025, but the dems didn't want to let that happen, so they set the 2025 part D "direct subsidy", paid to the insurance companies, at $142.67 PER MONTH, per member. That's what's behind all of the $0 premium part D plans this year. Will they keep the subsidy that high for 2026? It's only a worst case of $1,172 per person per year if the subsidy was eliminated completely. Where the heck does all this subsidy money come from, anyway?