Louisiana
NBC’s ‘The Voice’: Checking in with some of Louisiana’s past musical success stories
Twenty-eight seasons in, “The Voice” has yet to crown a Louisiana winner. But the state keeps sending singers deep into the competition — and turning national exposure into momentum long after the cameras stop rolling.
The 29th season of “The Voice” premieres 8 p.m. Monday on NBC with judges John Legend, Kelly Clarkson and Adam Levine. The show streams on Peacock the day after airing.
Meghan Linsey came oh-so-close to winning “The Voice” in 2015, finishing as runner-up. It was a banner Season 8 for four other fellow Louisianans who also fared well in the competition, among them New Orleans’ Tonya Boyd-Cannon.
Fast forward to Season 25, when Louisiana’s Karen Waldrup placed fifth and Zoe Levert reached the top 12.
Last season, Acadiana’s Dustin Dale Gaspard brought something new to “The Voice,” wowing the judges in his blind audition by singing Sam Cooke’s “Bring It On Home To Me” in both English and Cajun French. He made it to the knockouts round before being eliminated.
Louisiana Cajun swamp pop singer Dustin Dale Gaspard, as seen on NBC’s ‘The Voice,’ sang in both English and Cajun French for his blind audition.
Here, we catch up with Boyd-Cannon, Levert and Gaspard, and give a glimpse of what those five Louisianans from Season 8 have done post-“The Voice.”
‘She is unafraid and she’s bold.’
When someone tells Tonya Boyd-Cannon she’s a busy woman, she’ll quickly correct with, “No, I’m blessed.”
According to the Mississippi-born-and-Louisiana-raised Boyd-Cannon, 46, the blessings have only multiplied since her 2015 appearance on “The Voice.” The NBC singing competition wasn’t her first stop on the road to national TV. She had pursued “Star Search,” “Showtime at the Apollo” and “American Idol.” She was turned away from the last one not because she lacked an impressive voice, but for being “too gospel.”
However, Boyd-Cannon, who grew up in New Orleans’ Lower Ninth Ward, had early success on “The Voice” with soul, pop, rock, gospel and rhythm-and-blues performances. She advanced to the live playoffs, when contestants were trimmed from 20 to 12, before being eliminated.
At one point, her coach, Maroon 5’s Adam Levine, had this to say: “She is unafraid and she’s bold. The No. 1 one thing I try to tell everybody else on my team, do what Tonya does.”
“That makes me feel amazing, to know that someone, that he saw me in that light, because it’s such a great opportunity to be able to do what I love to do, be bold and just to take a chance,” she said.
Nevertheless, Boyd-Cannon needed time to heal post-“The Voice,” leaning on the words of another of the show’s four coaches.
“I recalled something Pharrell (Williams, singer, songwriter and record producer) told me on that same day (of her elimination). He said, ‘Tonya, this is your springboard. Don’t let nobody take this moment from you,’” she said. “And so I left remembering that.”
Following that pause, her music picked back up in a big way. Since 2015, Boyd-Cannon has toured around the globe, released multiple singles and albums. She also teaches voice in the Black American music program at Tulane University as an adjunct professor, at an after- school program at the Leah Chase School, and at a vocal workshop at the Jazz and Heritage Center.
She described her most recent record, 2025’s “The Cluster,” as “a Dear Tonya letter.” Her latest single, the lively, fun “Everywhere Else It’s Tuesday,” dropped just before Mardi Gras.
She currently has 21,000 followers on Facebook and 27,100 on Instagram.
Levert makes her move
Things have been moving quickly for folk/pop/contemporary Christian artist Levert since her move to Nashville, Tennessee, last year.
The New Orleans native and former Baton Rouge resident, 23, has signed with By Design music company and WME, a talent and booking agency. She’s writing and releasing songs, scoping out gigs and mapping her future in Music City.
Reflecting on Season 25 of “The Voice,” where she reached the top 12 in 2024, Levert calls the experience “incredible.”
Louisiana native Zoe Levert, 20, was a contestant on Season 25 of ‘The Voice’ in 2024, competing on John Legend’s team.
The then-20 year old, in what was essentially her stage debut, impressed the judges and the voting viewers at home with her spins on songs like “Cowboy Take Me Away” by The Chicks, Little Big Town’s “Better Man” and “Iris” by the Goo Goo Dolls.
“It was my first time really performing on a stage like that. I had to learn how to perform and how to be captivating on stage,” she said.
With John Legend as her coach, Levert says the many vocal coaches and choreographers put her through what she calls “artist bootcamp.” She had a crash course in the facets of the music industry, building a brand and becoming an artist.
Levert adds that she feels like she thrived the most on the singing competition series when she started being herself — requesting songs that she loved and talking about her faith.
“I definitely carry that into my career now; just trying to be who I am and who God designed me to be and tell stories that I’m passionate about,” she said.
Those stories surface in the three singles Levert has dropped in the last five months, including this month’s breakup song, “sharing Jesus with an ex.” Now happily married to fellow musician Ryan Turner, she reached into her past for inspiration.
Former Louisiana ‘The Voice’ contestants Karen Waldrup, left, and Zoe Levert duet on the Chris Stapleton ballad ‘Tennessee Whiskey’ during Waldrup’s show at the Manship Theatre in Baton Rouge.
“I remember, when I was younger, going through a really bad breakup and having this temporary thought of, ‘I feel like Jesus would be on my side in this breakup,’ which isn’t exactly fair to the guy that I ended the relationship with,” she explained. “The song is kind of a sarcastic, funny way to deal with that feeling of wishing Jesus would only take your side, especially when it’s a guy that didn’t treat you super well.”
Levert initially posted the song on TikTok, attracting millions of views. With the amount of people who were relating to the story, she decided to release the song with her label.
The singer-songwriter’s other two recent singles are “Custody,” released in October — a song about who gets custody of coffee shops and friend groups after a breakup — and “Dear Carpenter,” released in December.
“In the Bible when we talk about how Jesus was a carpenter and a craftsman, … there’s gotta be something there with him being a carpenter and him fixing things and how the love of Jesus can fix and heal us,” Levert said. “Instead of saying, ‘Dear God,’ I say ‘Dear Carpenter,’ and I use the language of fixing and refining and rebuilding.”
Plans for an album from Levert in the near future are still fluid. For now, she and her team are focused on producing one song at a time.
Levert currently has 1,000 followers on Facebook and 26,200 on Instagram.
Louisiana musician Dustin Dale Gaspard performs in ‘The Voice’s’ blind auditions in 2025.
Gaspard on the road again
Acadiana’s Gaspard can sum up the difference in his music career since competing on “The Voice” last fall in one word: volume.
“Nothing has changed except the volume, you know? Everyone is finally paying attention, so I have opportunities that I’ve never had before,” Gaspard, 33, said by phone on Monday. “And the frequency of which those doors open is a little more often, but besides that, I’m still performing as much as I can, playing as often wherever I can to wherever people will have me.”
On Lundi Gras, that “wherever” was the 20th annual Swamp Pop Reunion Show in Ville Platte. The Cow Island native performed three songs: Rod Bernard’s “Allons Danser Colinda,” Van Broussard’s “Feed the Flame” and a reprisal of “Bring It On Home To Me.”
Soon, he’ll do 10 days of shows on Prince Edward Island, off Nova Scotia. Gaspard will follow that with a four-week tour across British Columbia.
Audiences at these above-the-border performances aren’t like back home, Gaspard has observed.
“Oh, far off rowdy. I hate to use the word respectful, but it’s just a different environment,” he said. “People are there to consume music, not to be entertained by it. It’s not like a background feature of the culture or atmosphere. It’s actually the feature that you’re going to witness, you know? That’s the biggest difference.”
Likewise, song choices vary greatly while in Canada from Lafayette on Saturday night.
“When I’m there, I’m doing folk music and telling stories. When we’re playing somewhere here out on Saturday night, we’re trying to keep the people on the dance floor,” said Gaspard.
Gaspard says he “had one of the best times of my life” while working with the coaches on “The Voice.” The main lesson he took away from the experience is that all artists, no matter where they are, have the same passion, sacrifice and humility to share their craft with the world.
Gaspard, who’s released a few singles, also hopes to make an album happen.
Meanwhile, his fan base has grown exponentially since his global exposure on “The Voice.” Tens of thousands of followers on every platform, videos viewed by millions of people across the world and many requests to perform and produce new music.
“And I’m hoping to find a way to keep them all satisfied because it feels like a lot of pressure,” he said. “And it’s hard to keep up with when there’s so many people that you care about because they care about you.”
Gaspard currently has 51,000 followers on Facebook and 21,000 on Instagram.
Tonya Boyd-Cannon, left, sings as she is joined on stage by Troy ‘Trombone Shorty’ Andrews, center, and the New Orleans Gospel Soul Children, right, at Mayor Helena Moreno’s inauguration at the Saenger Theatre in New Orleans on Jan. 12, 2026.
The Louisiana 5
In Season 8, five Louisianans made it deep into the season. These days, four of the five are still in the music world — while one has become an attorney in Texas. Another is also dabbling in the world of real estate.
Besides Boyd-Cannon, filling out the 2015 five are:
Photo provided by Max Zoghbi — Lafayette native and LSU alumnus Travis Ewing plays a handful of shows each month at bars and restaurants in Charleston, South Carolina. He balances his music career and full-time profession at a marketing firm.
Travis Ewing: In 2015, Lafayette native Ewing moved to Charleston, South Carolina, just before auditioning for “The Voice.” He was originally on Pharrell Williams’ team, but was stolen by Blake Shelton. After Ewing advanced to the top 32, he was eliminated in the knockouts round. He originally said “The Voice” experience gave him the confidence to pursue music as a full-time career.
He pursued music in South Carolina for a while but has since earned a juris doctorate, graduating magna cum laude from the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law in 2020. He was admitted to the Texas Bar. Previously, he earned a bachelor of science in marketing from LSU.
He currently has 1,900 friends on Facebook and 2,303 followers on Instagram.
Koryn Hawthorne, left, and Kelly Clarkson share the stage on ‘The Voice’ finale in 2015.
Koryn Hawthorne: This Abbeville native competed on “The Voice” in 2015 and won fourth place on Pharrell Williams’ team. Abbeville’s mayor proclaimed May 6, 2015, as Koryn Hawthorne Day. Her debut studio album, “Unstoppable,” was released July 13, 2018, and earned her multiple awards nominations, including two Grammy nods.
She released her most recent album, “On God,” in 2024. These days, she’s still performing, but also self-contracting residential buildings, including a decked-out barndominium in Acadiana.
She currently has 505,000 followers on Facebook and 509,000 followers on Instagram.
Meghan Linsey: In April 2015, the Ponchatoula native and four other Louisiana contestants made it up the ranks in Season 8 of “The Voice.” She finished in the runner-up spot behind Sawyer Fredericks, and rose to fame as one half of the country music duo Steel Magnolia with her then-boyfriend, Joshua Scott Jones.
In 2023, she reworked the theme song for “Queer Eye” when the then-fab five filmed in New Orleans and Baton Rouge. Most recently, she released “Blue” on Feb. 13. Nashville Noise described Linsey’s newest song: “After nearly a decade between full-length albums, Meghan Linsey is stepping back into the spotlight with ‘Blue,’ a retro-tinged, emotionally rich ballad that leans into heartbreak’s quieter, more lingering aftermath.”
She currently has 75,000 followers on Facebook and 68,000 on Instagram.
Donaldsonville singer Rob Taylor made it to ‘The Voice’s’ top 10 in 2015.
Rob Taylor: Hailing from Donaldsonville, Taylor was 22 when he auditioned for Season 8 of “The Voice.” Coach Christina Aguilera was so impressed, she rushed the stage to hug him. Guess which team Taylor joined? He made it to the show’s Top 10. His Top 12 night performance of “I Put a Spell on You” reached No. 1 on the iTunes R&B/Soul singles chart.
In 2020, he decided to give the television singing-competition world another go and auditioned for “American Idol.” He made it through round 3 and went to Hawaii where he was eliminated before making the Top 20.
He currently has 5,300 followers on Facebook.
As a new season of “The Voice” begins 8 p.m. Monday on NBC, Louisiana will once again be watching — and waiting — to see whether one of its own can finally claim the title.
Staff writer Jan Risher contributed to this report.
Louisiana
Officials confirm Pensacola Beach residue is algae, not oil from Louisiana spill
PENSACOLA BEACH, Fla. — A local fisherman raised concerns about the substance now coating Opal Beach, citing a recent oil spill off the coast of Louisiana.
WEAR News went to officials with the Gulf Islands National Seashore and Escambia County to find out the cause.
They say it’s not related to an oil spill, but is in fact algae.
The Marine Resources Division says they can understand beachgoers’ concerns, and hope to raise awareness.
“You don’t even want to get near it because it’s so gooey and sticky,” local fisherman Larry Grossman said. “It was accumulating on my beach cart wheels yesterday, and it felt like an oil product.”
Grossman messaged WEAR News on Monday after noticing something brown and oozy in the sand. He says it started showing up by Fort Pickens and stretched down to Opal Beach.
Grossman said a park service employee told him it could be oil from a recent spill in Louisiana. So he took a message to social media, sparking some reactions and raising questions.
“it certainly didn’t seem like an algae bloom because I was in the water, I caught a fish and I put some water in the cooler to keep my fish cool and it almost looked like oil in it,” Grossman said. “I know some people think it’s an algae bloom, but it certainly smelled and felt and looked like oil.”
A Gulf Islands National Seashore spokesperson confirmed to WEAR News on Tuesday that the substance is algae.
WEAR News crews were at the beach as officials with the Escambia County Marines Resources Division came out take samples.
“What I found here washed up on the beach is some algae — filamentous algae, single celled algae — that washed ashore in some onshore winds,” said Robert Turpin, Escambia County Marines Resources Division manager. “This is the spring season, so with additional sunlight, our plants, they grow in warmer waters, with plenty of sunlight.”
Turpin says this algae is not harmful.
He also addressed the concerns that this could be oil, saying he’s familiar with what oil spills look like.
He says he appreciates when people like Grossman raise the concerns.
“The last thing in the world we want is something to gain traction on social media that is faults in nature that could harm our tourism,” Turpin said. “Our tourism is very important to our economy, and we want to give the right information out to the public so we all enjoy the beaches and enjoy them safely.”
Turpin says if you see something or suspect something may be harmful on the beach, avoid it and contact Escambia County Marine Resources.
Louisiana
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry calls for amendment for teacher pay raises
VIDEO: Louisiana 2026 Legislative Session Previewed in Lafayette
At One Acadiana’s Lafayette outlook event, business and policy leaders discussed the 2026 session and what it could mean for jobs, schools and voters.
BATON ROUGE — Gov. Jeff Landry advocated for a constitutional amendment that would create a permanent teacher pay raise as well as an eventual elimination of the state income tax in an opening address to the Louisiana Legislature on Monday.
Landry pushed for the passage of Proposed Amendment 3 on the May 2026 ballot to free up money for teacher pay raises.
He said the amendment would pay down longstanding debt within the Teachers’ Retirement System of Louisiana and enable the state to afford a permanent increase in teacher income. The proposed increases are $2,250 for teachers and $1,125 for support staff.
“With a ‘yes’ vote, we can strengthen the retirement system, improve their take-home pay, and guess what? We can do it without raising taxes,” Landry said.
A bill proposing the elimination of the state income tax, which takes in about $4 billion annually, was pre-filed earlier in the year by Rep. Danny McCormick, R-Oil City. Where the money will come from to supplement the loss is currently unclear.
McCormick said in an interview with the LSU Manship School News Service that to encourage more young adults to stay in Louisiana, “we need to do away with the state income tax.”
“This is a conversation piece that hopefully we can figure out where to make cuts in the government so we can get the people their money back,” McCormick said.
But Senate President Cameron Henry, R-Metairie, said at a luncheon at the Baton Rouge Press Club that if the Legislature “can be disciplined” this session, residents could anticipate a 0.5% decrease in state income tax during next year’s session. He also said bigger tax cuts have to be planned over a longer budget cycle.
Within education changes, Landry commended the placing of the Ten Commandments in classrooms, approved by the Louisiana Supreme Court in a decision handed down last week.
“You have staked the flag of morality by recognizing that the Ten Commandments are not a bad way to live your life,” Landry said. “Students who don’t read them will likely read the criminal code.”
Landry’s budget proposed an $82 million increase for corrections services following 2024 tough-on-crime legislation that eliminated parole and probation, increased sentencing and encouraged harsher punishments.
Landry directed his criticism toward the New Orleans criminal justice system, which he feels is lacking accountability, especially in courtrooms.
“Judges hold enormous power, but they are not social workers with a gavel,” he said. “They are the final gatekeepers of public safety.”
The Orleans Parish criminal justice system relies on state and local funding stemming from revenues from fees imposed on those arrested, according to the Vera Institute. Landry said the state spends twice as much on the Orleans system as it does in East Baton Rouge Parish, the largest parish in the state.
“Being special does not mean being exempt from accountability,” Landry said.
Overall, Landry pushed for fewer and different ideas compared to the sweeping agenda he laid out at the start of previous legislative sessions. Henry mentioned at the Baton Rouge Press Club that the governor would like for this session to be a “member-driven session instead of an administrative session.”
Landry spoke only in general terms about his proposal for more funding for LA Gator, his program to let parents use state money to send their children to private schools.
“We must find a path so that the hard-earned money of parents follow their child to the education of their choice,” he said.
He has proposed doubling funding for the LA Gator program from $44 million a year to $88.2 million. The likelihood of this occurring is yet to be seen, as prominent lawmakers such as Sen. Henry are hesitant to approve an increase in funding.
Landry similarly did not mention carbon capture projects, despite the issue gaining traction from affected parish residents and lawmakers.
House Speaker Phillip DeVillier, R-Eunice, told the Baton Rouge Press Club last week that 22 bills have been filed in the House that he would consider “anti-carbon capture.”
Landry also cited data centers and other giant industrial development projects and touted his administration’s success in bringing more jobs to Louisiana and in helping to lower insurance premiums over the past year.
“May we continue to employ courage over comfort, and if we do, there is really no limit to what we can do for Louisiana,” Landry said.
Louisiana
Louisiana’s LNG exports are driving out fishermen and driving up utility bills across the U.S.
Phillip Dyson once tried working a job that wasn’t shrimping. He lasted three days on an oil rig before going right back to his boat.
“The man said, you just tell me you want the job, we’ll fire the other guy,” he said with a laugh. “I said, don’t fire that man, ’cause I ain’t coming back.”
For more than half a century, Dyson has been fishing the coastal waters of Cameron, Louisiana. Forty years ago, Cameron Parish was the top seafood port in the United States. Today, it’s ground zero for America’s LNG export boom, a multibillion-dollar industry — the U.S. is the top exporter in the world — that has reshaped the landscape, the economy, and the daily lives of the people who have lived here for generations.
When Dyson looks out from the shrimp dock now, he doesn’t recognize what he sees: spindly cranes, cylindrical cooling towers and the constant hum of the construction and processing of liquified natural gas (LNG) terminals rising above the marsh.
Ian McKenna
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More Perfect Union
The terminals run day and night, super-cooling natural gas into liquid form where it’s loaded onto massive tanker ships for export to places like Europe and Asia.
Shrimpers like Dyson are catching about half of what they used to, driving many out of the industry.
“There used to be 200 shrimp boats in this town — down to 15,” Dyson said. “You went from a fishing town to a town that didn’t care less about the fishermen.”
Dyson is stubborn and set in his ways. Shrimping is all he knows. He doesn’t want to leave Cameron. He buried his parents here. Scattered his daughter’s ashes in the water.
“I would never want to leave her behind,” he said. “But I’m gonna have to.”
‘You’re just surrounded’
Ian McKenna
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More Perfect Union
Cameron Parish was an attractive destination for reasons both geographic and financial. It sits close to the Haynesville Shale formation, one of the country’s most productive natural gas fields, has no parish-wide sales tax and LNG companies have secured industrial tax exemptions that, according to community advocates, amount to nearly a billion dollars a year across the three operating terminals — roughly $6 million per permanent job created.
“They don’t only export gas — they export the profits,” said James Hiatt, a former oil and gas worker who founded For a Better Bayou, a southwest Louisiana environmental community organization. “That’s the key.”
The company at the center of the expansion is Venture Global, which operates the Calcasieu Pass terminal, known as CP1, just outside of Cameron. In a March earnings call, the company reported it made more than $6 billion in 2025 alone — tripling its profits from the previous year.
In an interview last year on CNBC, Venture Global’s CEO, Mike Sabel, described the company in terms residents find difficult to square with their daily reality: “Ultimately our business is that we manufacture and operate machines that produce money.”
President Donald Trump’s administration approved a second Venture Global terminal in Cameron — CP2 — just two months after taking office in 2025. Nationally, 17 new export terminals are either under construction or have won approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). Six of them are in southwest Louisiana.
Robyn Thigpen, a local resident and executive director of the advocacy group Fishermen Involved in Saving Our Heritage (FISH), described the sense of encirclement many people feel.
“When you turn here,” she said, pointing in different directions from the beach in Cameron, “the cranes off in the distance is the expansion to CP1. 12 miles back into town is Hackberry LNG. Probably about 30 miles this direction is Sabine LNG. So you’re just surrounded.”
‘No shrimper can make it here’
Ian McKenna
/
More Perfect Union
Last August, while Venture Global was dredging a shipping channel at CP1 — pumping out mud and sediment to clear a path for vessels — something went wrong. The company spilled hundreds of acres of sediment into the surrounding marsh.
The mud blanketed the area where Tad Theriot, a shrimper turned oysterman, had been growing his harvest. He pivoted to oyster farming two years ago, after years of declining shrimp catches made the traditional livelihood impossible to sustain.
The dredge spill devastated his oyster operation almost overnight.
“Half of them died,” Theriot said. “We lost 50% on the big ones, even more than that.”
Out on the water, the evidence was plain — oysters pulled from cages bore what his farming partner Sky Leger called “mud blisters,” deposits of silt visible inside the shell.
Ian McKenna
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More Perfect Union
“Before you try, tell me — would you eat it if you knew that that was there?” Leger said, pointing to dark splotches on the iridescent cup of a fresh oyster. “How does that get there?”
Venture Global told More Perfect Union and Gulf States Newsroom in a statement that the “isolated discharge was quickly contained,” and that there were “no significant offsite impacts” as a result of the spill.
The Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries documented increased oyster mortality near the spill site in September, and fishermen have since requested a more comprehensive government study.
To date, no significant enforcement action has been taken against the company.
But according to documents obtained by More Perfect Union, Venture Global offered some affected fishermen $20,000 — on the condition they could never sue or speak negatively about the company again. When asked about the offer, Venture Global said the company “has communicated directly” with local fishermen “to develop mitigation and remediation plans, and minimize the potential for an event like this again.”
Theriot said he’d never take the money.
“That’s not right,” he said flatly. “I have hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of oysters. I want hundreds of thousands of dollars.”
Advocates like Hiatt called the settlement offers part of a pattern the company is using to sidestep accountability through financial and political power.
“After this spill, more people are understanding that these corporations don’t give a f— about you,” he said. “All they care about is how much money they can make.”
Last month, a pipeline part of an under-construction project operated by Delfin LNG ruptured near Holly Beach in Cameron Parish. The ensuing explosion resulted in “catastrophic injuries” to a contractor working for the company, according to a lawsuit filed in Texas that accused the company of negligence and failing to “ensure the pipeline was free of flammable vapors and materials.”
“It’s a reminder that these things are happening in a community that doesn’t even have a hospital,” Thigpen said, noting that the worker was taken to a hospital in Port Arthur, Texas, roughly 45 minutes away. “It’s another example of why we can’t trust these companies to do the right thing.”
‘You can’t afford this and food’
Ian McKenna
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More Perfect Union
The impacts of Cameron’s transformation don’t stop at the bayou’s edge. The LNG export boom is being felt in the utility bills of Americans across the country.
Eight LNG export terminals now consume more natural gas each day than all 74 million American households connected to gas utility service combined. The federal government projects the benchmark price of natural gas will average 22% higher in 2026 than in 2025, citing LNG exports as a driving factor.
A Public Citizen analysis found domestic natural gas prices were $12 billion higher for residential customers in just the first nine months of 2025 compared to the same period the year before — roughly $124 per household.
“It’s simple supply and demand,” Slocum said. “You’re forcing Americans to compete with their counterparts in Berlin and Beijing for access to U.S. natural gas. And that pushes the domestic price up. The more we export, the higher the prices the rest of Americans will pay to heat and cool their homes.”
In Hackberry, Louisiana — minutes down the road from Cameron Parish’s other export terminal — fisherman Eddie Lejuine and his wife Michelle have watched their bills climb. Lejuine depends on a refrigerated storage container to keep his catch marketable. Without it, he can’t work.
“You can’t afford this and food,” Michelle Lejuine said. “What are you gonna do? You gonna eat or are you gonna have electricity?”
Eddie Lejuine put it plainly: “We’re catching less fish, [making] less money, paying higher bills.”
Trump’s promise, the industry’s windfall
During the 2024 campaign, Trump pledged to cut Americans’ energy bills in half within 12 months. He repeated it at rallies and put it in writing in a Newsweek op-ed.
On his first day back in the White House, one of his earliest executive orders undid former President Joe Biden’s pause on pending LNG export approvals — a pause that was implemented, in part, because consumer advocates argued the existing review process failed to account for domestic price impacts.
The ties between Venture Global and the Trump administration run deep. According to reporting by the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post, the company’s CEO was present at a private 2024 meeting at which Trump reportedly asked oil and gas executives to contribute $1 billion to his campaign.
Slocum argued the gap between Trump’s promise and his policy is not an accident.
“What Trump has done is to prioritize the financial interests of the natural gas industry,” he said. “And the natural gas industry’s primary financial directive is to maximize LNG exports.”
Electricity prices jumped 6.9% in 2025 year over year, according to Goldman Sachs.
‘Find somewhere else to build this’
Ian McKenna
/
More Perfect Union
More than 90% of Cameron Parish voted for Trump in 2024. The mood among the fishermen who remain is harder to categorize than partisan politics.
When asked if he’d vote for Trump again, Lejuine said: “No, I’m not. I’m hoping we have a better selection of something.”
Hiatt, a self-described third-generation oil and gas worker, framed it as a matter of basic fairness rather than ideology.
“This is ‘America Last’ policy,” he said, “to export our natural resources to the highest bidder at the expense of every American.”
Dyson, standing at the dock in the late afternoon light, said what he would tell Venture Global and the politicians like Trump and Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, who championed the expansion: “Find somewhere else to build this s—. I never thought I’d have seen this place like this. Never in my lifetime.”
His electricity bill runs $350 to $500 a month for a 990-square-foot house, he said. He and his wife receive about $1,300 a month together on Social Security. With what he’s catching, it’s not enough.
He said he won’t stop shrimping, but he can’t do it in Cameron.
“This is what I do. That’s what I’m gonna do till they throw dirt on me. That might not be here, but I will fish till it’s over.”
This story was produced by the Gulf States Newsroom, a collaboration between Mississippi Public Broadcasting, WBHM in Alabama, WWNO and WRKF in Louisiana and NPR. This story was produced in collaboration with More Perfect Union.
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