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Celerity

(53,840 posts)
Tue Jan 20, 2026, 05:58 PM Yesterday

How Trump Doomed the American Auto Industry


Ford and GM made a big bet on electrification. Then Trump plunged a knife into their backs.

https://prospect.org/2026/01/20/how-trump-doomed-american-auto-industry/


Ford Lightning electric pickup trucks are displayed at a dealership, February 6, 2023, in Manchester, New Hampshire. Credit: Charles Krupa/AP Photo

About three and a half years ago, the American auto industry made a big bet on electrification, with the help of the Biden administration. It has been obvious to informed observers for at least a decade that EVs are where car production as an industry is going to land, sooner or later. They are faster, simpler, cheaper to run and maintain, dramatically more efficient, and most importantly, produce no direct carbon emissions, when stacked up against cars running on fossil fuels. So, the Inflation Reduction Act contained a large subsidy package for the manufacture and sale of EVs. Automakers got a variety of subsidies for building batteries and EVs, while car buyers got a $7,500 tax credit for purchasing them. That way, the Big Three—General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis—could start to catch up with Chinese companies, which stole a march on America the first time Trump threw a wrench into the EV transition. Thanks to the IRA, the Big Three could claim a piece of the global auto market going forward.

Then the American people, in their infinite wisdom, elected Donald Trump, and he proceeded to stab the American auto industry directly between the shoulder blades. Almost all of the EV subsidies in the IRA were repealed, as part of Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Now, thanks to that betrayal, plus Trump’s lunatic trade and foreign policy in general, the American auto industry is bleeding out. Consider Canada, which has historically been one of the biggest markets for American cars, being quite similar culturally, already heavily integrated into the U.S. auto industry (along with Mexico), and also one of the few places that will buy our big stupid trucks. America’s share of the Canadian auto market has been tumbling, down from about half in the previous decade to just 36 percent, because of Trump’s deranged trade war and threats of annexation, which has sparked a massive nationalist backlash and a mounting customer boycott of anything American.

Canada’s Liberal prime minister Mark Carney almost certainly would not have been elected without Trump’s lunatic aggression. Now, he is quietly attempting to detach Canada from its dependence on American trade wherever possible. Last week, he announced a trade deal with China whereby Canada would exchange a greatly reduced tariff on Chinese cars in exchange for a big increase in China’s imports of Canadian canola seed, along with several other agreements. This is the kiss of death for American car sales in Canada. You can get a Chinese Xiaomi sedan with 300-plus miles of range, more than 600 horsepower, and extremely fancy luxury trimmings for the equivalent of about $42,000 in China; or you can get a Chinese BYD Seagull with 190 miles of range for about $11,000. I would bet that the next step for Chinese automakers is to build a factory in Toronto or somewhere nearby so Canada can get a slice of the jobs and production.

More broadly, the American EV transition has clearly hit the skids, thanks to Trump. Sales plummeted by about 46 percent when the tax credit for purchase expired at the end of September. Ford took a $19.5 billion bath on a planned battery factory investment, canceled its F-150 EV, and is now reportedly in talks with—wait for it—BYD to pick up batteries for its hybrid cars sold abroad. GM is doing better, but its EV sales are still down sharply, as are Tesla’s. Contrary to the triumphalism of various EV critics, all this horrendous waste does not mean that the global EV transition is now in question. As I have previously detailed, in 2025 a quarter of global car sales were EVs, led by Southeast Asia, where the EV share of new car sales in several nations has soared past the 40 percent mark, with many more nations just behind. China, the largest car market in the world, went from almost zero to more than half in just five years. America’s failure to gain a serious toehold in EV production—particularly very cheap models—is a major reason why the Big Three’s share of the global auto market has fallen from nearly 30 percent in 2000 to about 12 percent today, while China’s share has risen from 2 percent to 42 percent.

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4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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AZJonnie

(2,967 posts)
1. But hey, he sure pwned the woke libs who believe in the climate change hoax, didn't he?!?
Tue Jan 20, 2026, 06:33 PM
Yesterday


Fucking idiot.

MichMan

(16,730 posts)
2. You know what else hurts the mass adoption of EV in the US?
Tue Jan 20, 2026, 06:34 PM
Yesterday

$3 per gallon gasoline.

Most of the EU countries and others around the world have very high gas taxes, making the average price of a gallon double that of ours. Don't see too many politicians running on raising gas taxes a few dollars a gallon.

fujiyamasan

(1,307 posts)
4. I'm sorry this is one area I completely disagree with standard democratic policy
Tue Jan 20, 2026, 06:45 PM
Yesterday

Which has basically become dogma over twenty years.

The whole electrification push was incredibly regressive and was also corporate welfare. Tax money basically being shoveled into the coffers of automakers to produce toys for the wealthy like the F150 lightning. Lower middle class and working class people barely benefited from it. After all the political wrangling it sure didn’t get democrats any additional votes.

It was those kind of boneheaded policies that built up Elon Musk’s wealth for one. It’s not the government’s responsibility to build up technology infrastructure. That should have been the automakers investment to make.

Oh well, it worked for me, so I’m not really complaining. I took advantage of the tax credit before it was repealed to lease a nice plug in hybrid. But I’m aware of my privilege in being able to afford the vehicle.

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