Automotive
Trump’s EPA targets $1 trillion in Biden’s forced EV future
Quick Hit:
The EPA on Tuesday moved to scrap an Obama-era rule that enabled over $1 trillion in vehicle emissions mandates, including Biden’s EV push. Administrator Lee Zeldin said it was based on “twisted law” and stripped Americans of consumer choice.
Key Details:
- EPA’s proposal would repeal greenhouse gas rules for all new light-, medium-, and heavy-duty vehicles, including unpopular features like start-stop systems.
- Administrator Zeldin said the Obama-Biden EPA “ignored precedent” and misused the Clean Air Act to justify regulating carbon dioxide and other emissions “some of which vehicles don’t even emit.”
- Trump Energy Secretary Chris Wright called the move “a monumental step toward returning to commonsense policies” that expand access to affordable energy and reduce costs.
EPA Administrator @LeeZeldin announces the largest deregulatory action in U.S. history—rescinding the 2009 Obama EPA “endangerment finding” and wiping out every greenhouse‑gas emissions regulations built on it. 🔥🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/Kt1kDZ9UOU
— Trump War Room (@TrumpWarRoom) July 29, 2025
Diving Deeper:
At an auto dealership in Indiana on Tuesday, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin formally proposed rescinding the Obama-era Endangerment Finding, a legal tool used to justify sweeping vehicle emissions mandates since 2009. According to the agency’s press release, scrapping the finding would eliminate Biden’s electric vehicle mandate and roll back regulations totaling more than $1 trillion in compliance costs.
“With this proposal, the Trump EPA is proposing to end sixteen years of uncertainty for automakers and American consumers,” Zeldin said. “The Obama and Biden EPAs twisted the law, ignored precedent, and warped science to achieve their preferred ends and stick American families with hundreds of billions of dollars in hidden taxes every single year.”
The Endangerment Finding allowed the EPA to regulate six gases—carbon dioxide among them—under Section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act. Zeldin said the finding made sweeping assumptions about climate risks and vehicle emissions, even though “some [of the gases] vehicles don’t even emit.” The EPA argues that the rule was constructed not to follow the law but to empower the agency to push sweeping mandates that Congress never authorized.
Zeldin was joined at the announcement by U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Indiana Governor Mike Braun, Attorney General Todd Rokita, and trucking industry leaders. Wright called the repeal “a monumental step toward returning to commonsense policies,” while Braun praised the move as proof that “we can protect our environment and support American jobs.”
Since the finding was issued in 2009, the EPA has used it to justify at least seven separate vehicle emissions rules, including unpopular mandates such as start-stop technology in passenger cars and stringent electric truck rules for the shipping industry. Combined, the regulations have imposed more than $1 trillion in economic costs, according to conservative estimates cited by the agency.
“The electric-truck mandate put the trucking industry on a path to economic ruin,” said American Trucking Association President and CEO Chris Spear. “It would have crippled our supply chain, disrupted deliveries, and raised prices for American families and businesses.”
The proposal cites updated data from the Department of Energy’s 2025 Climate Work Group and recent Supreme Court decisions—including West Virginia v. EPA and Loper Bright v. Raimondo—as justification for overturning the finding. These rulings, the EPA says, make clear that major regulatory actions must come from Congress, not unelected bureaucrats.
“EPA is committed to fulfilling President Trump’s promise to unleash American energy, lower costs for Americans, revitalize the American auto industry, restore the rule of law, and give power back to states to make their own decisions,” the agency said.
Automotive
Canada’s EV experiment has FAILED
By Dan McTeague
The government’s attempt to force Canadians to buy EVs by gambling away billions of tax dollars and imposing an EV mandate has been an abject failure.
GM and Stellantis are the latest companies to back track on their EV plans in Canada despite receiving billions in handouts from Canadian taxpayers.
Dan McTeague explains in his latest video.
Automotive
Carney’s Budget Risks Another Costly EV Bet
From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy
GM’s Ontario EV plant was sold as a green success story. Instead it collapsed under subsidies, layoffs and unsold vans
Every age invents new names for old mistakes. In ours, they’re sold as investments. Before the Carney government unveils its November budget promising another future paid for in advance, Canadians should remember Ingersoll, Ont., one of the last places a prime minister tried to buy tomorrow.
Eager to transform the economy, in December 2022, former prime minister Justin Trudeau promised that government backing would help General Motors turn its Ingersoll plant into a beacon of green industry. “By 2025 it will be producing 50,000 electric vehicles per year,” he declared: 137 vehicles daily, six every hour. What sounded like renewal became an expensive demonstration of how progressive governments peddle rampant spending as sound strategy.
The plan began with $259 million from Ottawa and another $259 million from Ontario: over half a billion to switch from Equinox production to BrightDrop electric delivery vans. The promise was thousands of “good, middle-class jobs.”
The assembly plant employed 2,000 workers before retooling. Today, fewer than 700 remain; a two-thirds collapse. With $518 million in public funds and only 3,500 vans built in 2024, taxpayers paid $148,000 per vehicle. The subsidy works out to over half a million dollars per remaining worker. Two out of every three employees from Trudeau’s photo-op are now unemployed.
The failure was entirely predictable. Demand for EVs never met the government’s plan. Parking lots filled with unsold inventory. GM did the rational thing: slowed production, cut staff and left. The Canadian taxpayer was left to pay the bill.
This reveals the weakness of Ottawa’s industrial policy. Instead of creating conditions for enterprise, such as reliable energy, stable regulation, and moderate taxes, progressive governments spend to gain applause. They judge success by the number of jobs announced, yet those jobs vanish once the cameras leave.
Politicians keep writing cheques to industry. Each administration claims to be more strategic, yet the pattern persists. No country ever bought its way into competitiveness.
Trudeau “bet big on electric vehicles,” but betting with other people’s money isn’t vision; it’s gambling. The wager wasn’t on technology but narrative, the naive idea that moral intention could replace market reality. The result? Fewer jobs, unwanted products and claims of success that convinced no one.
Prime Minister Mark Carney has mastered the same rhetorical sleight of hand. Spending becomes “investment,” programs become “platforms.” He promises to “catalyze unprecedented investments” while announcing fiscal restraint: investing more while spending less. His $13-billion federal housing agency is billed as a future investment, though it’s immediate public spending under a moral banner.
“We can build big. Build bold. Build now,” Carney declared, promising infrastructure to “reduce our vulnerabilities.” The cadence of certainty masks the absence of limits. Announcing “investment” becomes synonymous with action itself; ambition replaces accountability.
The structure mirrors the Ingersoll case: promise vast returns from state-directed spending, redefine subsidy as vision, rely on tomorrow to conceal today’s bill. “Investment” has become the language of evasion, entitlement and false pride.
As Carney prepares his first budget, Canadians should remember what happened when their last leader tried to buy a future with lavish “investment.”
A free economy doesn’t need bribery to breathe. It requires the discipline of risk and liberty to fail without dragging a country down. Ingersoll wasn’t undone by technology but by ideological conceit. Prosperity cannot be decreed and markets cannot be commanded into obedience.
Every age invents new names for old mistakes. Ours keeps making the same ones. Entitled hubris knows no bounds.
Marco Navarro-Genie is vice-president of research at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy and co-author, with Barry Cooper, of Canada’s COVID: The Story of a Pandemic Moral Panic (2023).
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