MUCH MORE LIKE THIS, PLEASE: Trump’s stand against states’ climate overreach is long overdue.

President Trump just drew a hard line against blue state climate activism — and not a moment too soon.

His April 8 executive order, Protecting American Energy From State Overreach, takes direct aim at states like California, New York and Hawaii that are trying to sue American energy companies into submission. These lawsuits, funded by taxpayers, don’t just threaten jobs and gas prices — they’re a direct attack on the U.S. energy sector and the families who depend on it.

The order rightly calls out these rogue lawsuits as a national security risk. It directs the Department of Justice to review and challenge state and local laws, policies and legal actions that interfere with domestic energy development, especially those dressed up in the language of “climate change,” “ESG” or “environmental justice.” In plain English, it tells activist state attorneys general to stop using the courts to make energy policy the voters never approved.

As someone who served on the Energy, Climate, and Grid Security Subcommittee in Congress, I’ve seen firsthand how these lawsuits work. State officials file sweeping legal claims blaming energy companies for climate change, while trial lawyers circle like vultures. Meanwhile, working families face higher energy prices and fewer jobs, all because a handful of states want to virtue signal in court.

Here’s the bigger problem: Many of these same states are still taking billions in federal grants for infrastructure, transportation and grid upgrades — projects that depend on the very energy companies they’re trying to bankrupt.

Why should taxpayer money be spent in states that are suing the industries we all rely on to build our roads, power our homes and keep our economy moving?

If states want to pursue these lawsuits, they shouldn’t expect to keep cashing federal checks while they do it. Trump should take the next logical step: direct agencies to cut off infrastructure and energy funding to states actively pursuing climate lawsuits against U.S. energy companies.

That’s not political retribution — it’s common sense. No business would invest in a state actively trying to sue it out of existence. The federal government shouldn’t, either.

Atlas Shrugged wasn’t meant to be a how-to guide.