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Renowned billionaire investor Carl Icahn has said he might get involved in the presidential election, by funding an ad campaign to highlight Trump’s vow to cut down government red tape.

It isn’t an abstract problem for Icahn, who recently accuses the Environmental Protection Agency for cutting profits per pair of his oil refineries.

The ad campaign would stress the fact that Trump remains the only candidate to rein in ridiculous government regulations and bring more confidence back, meaning more capital spending.

Icahn said he is going to purchase the ads through a super-political action committee (which will be a means to accept unlimited sized donations from wealthy donors). Currently said to worth $20 billion, by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Icahn clearly has the means.

He was an early Trump supporter, chose not to join his campaign this year because it may conflict with the super-PAC project. Icahn plans to come to a decision on whether to carry on with the super-PAC project in coming days.

Icahn’s beef with the EPA is related to the Renewable Fuels Standard, a program designed to promote the use of ethanol and/or other biofuels. Both refiners and importers need to blend biofuels with gasoline, or purchase credits called renewable identification numbers (RINs) from companies that do so.

A hike in the cost of RINs this year has cut deeply into the profits of refineries like CVR that does not do much blending and doesn’t have a network of gas stations (Icahn owns 82% of CVR Energy Inc) meaning they cannot produce all the RINs needed in-house. Icahn presented a copy of an 11-page letter (which he sent to the EPA a week ago complaining that the RIN market is rigged) to Bloomberg News.