logo
Watchdog says Trump administration illegally halted EV charger funding

Watchdog says Trump administration illegally halted EV charger funding

Yahoo23-05-2025
The Trump administration is breaking the law by withholding funds appropriated by Congress for a national electric vehicle (EV) charging network, a government watchdog says.
The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law allocated $5 billion for the National Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (NEVI) program, which set out to help build a national network of EV chargers.
In February, the Department of Transportation (DOT) said it would rescind all guidance related to the program and that 'no new obligations may occur' under the existing program until it issues updated guidance.
A lawsuit over the matter from several states alleges that the department is withholding a total of $2.74 billion in funding.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) a nonpartisan congressional watchdog, this week agreed, saying the Trump administration's move violates the Impoundment Control Act.
'DOT is not authorized … to withhold these funds from expenditure and must continue to carry out the statutory requirements of the program,' the watchdog said.
'If DOT wishes to make changes to the obligation and expenditure of funds appropriated under the NEVI Formula Program, it must propose funds for rescission or otherwise propose legislation to make changes to the law for consideration by Congress,' the GAO continued.
A spokesperson for the Transportation Department said in an email that the watchdog's report 'shows a complete misunderstanding of the law.'
'Their conclusion conflicts with Congress' intent, and completely misunderstands the Federal-aid highway program and how Congress structured the NEVI program,' the department said. 'In cherry-picking language in the program statute, GAO's assessment is also at odds with its own reports on how Federal-aid Highway programs similar to NEVI receive and use appropriated funds.'
The spokesperson added that the department was reviewing and updating the program guidance 'because the implementation of NEVI has failed miserably, and DOT will continue to work in good faith to update the program so it can be utilized more efficiently and effectively.'
While the finding only applies to the EV program, that is just one of many undergoing a funding freeze or cancellation instituted by the Trump administration.
Senate Democrats estimate that the administration is blocking a total of $430 billion.
'This legal decision affirms what we've long known: the President is breaking the law to block funding Congress passed on a bipartisan basis and that is owed to the American people — simply because he disagrees with it. This plain fact is unacceptable — and it cannot stand any longer,' Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) said in a statement.
'These bipartisan investments need to start flowing immediately — as do the hundreds of billions of dollars in other investments President Trump is holding up. I don't care about Russ Vought's personal interpretation of our spending laws; the Constitution is clear, and President Trump simply does not have the power of the purse — Congress does,' Murray added, referring to the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Forget DC. We've got rabbits with tentacles the National Guard needs to fight.
Forget DC. We've got rabbits with tentacles the National Guard needs to fight.

USA Today

time24 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Forget DC. We've got rabbits with tentacles the National Guard needs to fight.

I'm not an expert on pending apocalypses, but I have a hunch that 'rabbits with tentacles' and 'radioactive wasps' might be nature's way of telling us to buckle the (expletive) up. I have a question for our so-called government: Why has the National Guard been sent to Washington, DC, to combat a make-believe crime wave when America is facing a literal invasion of tentacled rabbits and radioactive wasps? An Aug.13 headline right here in USA TODAY read: 'Rabbits with 'tentacles' spotted in Colorado. Are they OK?' No. No, they are not OK, and neither are we, because last time I checked, BUNNIES DON'T HAVE TENTACLES! Rabbits with tentacles and radioactive wasps. What could go wrong? Two weeks ago, CNN had this headline: 'Radioactive wasp nest found at site where US once made nuclear bombs.' Oh. Radioactive wasps, you say? Found near an old nuclear weapons plant? That sounds like a totally normal thing we should ignore. Look, I'm not an expert on pending apocalypses or a proven spotter of signs of the end-times, but I have a hunch that 'rabbits with tentacles' and 'radioactive wasps' might be nature's way of telling us to buckle the (expletive) up. Ignoring our tentacled rabbit crisis, Trump sends National Guard to DC And how is the current administration addressing our pending wasp-ageddon? By not doing a darn thing. The president is apparently too busy dispatching armed soldiers to the nation's capital because a government employee who calls himself Big Balls claims he was beaten up by children. (Google it.) Opinion: Trump ushers in new DC tourist event: 'A Live Re-creation of Authoritarianism!' Life in America is unfolding like a rejected screenplay for a spinoff of 'The Walking Dead,' and I, for one, am not looking forward to death-by-rabbit-tentacle. When the government tells you not to worry about bunnies, worry The Colorado bunnies in question, according to a New York Times report, have 'black spikes growing on their heads, tentacles protruding from their mouths and sluglike growths blocking their eyes.' Totally normal. Totally cool. Colorado Parks and Wildlife spokeswoman Kara Van Hoose said the bunnies have something called cottontail rabbit papillomavirus, which can't spread to humans. What I found notable about that comment is that Van Hoose failed to say whether the infected bunnies can use their mouth tentacles to grab humans by the face before exsanguinating them. That's certainly what I would do if I were a rabbit with mouth tentacles. Please disregard the radioactive wasps. Everything is fine. In South Carolina, near the facility where the radioactive wasps were found, the so-called experts tried to paint a similarly calm portrait of the looming nuclear-wasp crisis. Opinion alerts: Get columns from your favorite columnists + expert analysis on top issues, delivered straight to your device through the USA TODAY app. Don't have the app? Download it for free from your app store. Edwin Deshong, manager of the U.S. Department of Energy's Savannah River Operations Office, told The Times in a statement that his agency is 'managing the discovery of four wasp nests with very low levels of radioactive contamination,' saying the wasps 'do not pose a health risk' to 'the community, or the environment.' That's generally the last thing a person hears before getting murdered by a radioactive wasp. We need our National Guard focused on bunnies and wasps Look, if there's one thing the Trump administration has taught me, it's not to trust the government. So if you think I'm going to read news stories about nuclear-powered wasp menaces and freak rabbits with tentacles and black spikes growing out of their heads and think everything is hunky dory, think again. Opinion: I'm glad Trump is focused on nonexistent DC crime wave, not his campaign promises I believe the government is trying to distract us from our pending annihilation at the hands (paws? stingers?) of bloodthirsty bunnies and wasps by claiming crime in DC is out of control. Don't buy it, folks. We must demand our National Guard troops be sent where they are actually needed. Not to the National Mall or the streets of DC, where the leading crime lately is assault with a foot-long sandwich, but to the ravaged tentacle-bunny lands of Colorado and the toxic wasp swamps of South Carolina. This is serious. At least as serious as what's happening in Washington, DC. Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on Bluesky at @ and on Facebook at You can read diverse opinions from our USA TODAY columnists and other writers on the Opinion front page, on X, formerly Twitter, @usatodayopinion and in our Opinion newsletter.

California Just Gave Their Redistricting Bill A Very Good Name With Very Good Branding
California Just Gave Their Redistricting Bill A Very Good Name With Very Good Branding

Buzz Feed

time24 minutes ago

  • Buzz Feed

California Just Gave Their Redistricting Bill A Very Good Name With Very Good Branding

California is getting new election maps. Trump didn't respond, so he started tweeting like him: "DONALD TRUMP, THE LOWEST POLLING PRESIDENT IN RECENT HISTORY, THIS IS YOUR SECOND-TO-LAST WARNING!!! (THE NEXT ONE IS THE LAST ONE!). STAND DOWN NOW OR CALIFORNIA WILL COUNTER-STRIKE (LEGALLY!) TO DESTROY YOUR ILLEGAL CROOKED MAPS IN RED STATES." And ding ding, time ran out. Trump never responded. Today, he announced he would be going through with that redistricting. And now, we've got a name for it. It's the "Election Rigging Response Act." As this person said, "Gavin's 'Election Rigging Response Act' may just be the most beautiful bill name I've ever heard." So, what do you think? Would you vote yes?

Protesters take over DC streets, police checkpoint following Trump's federal takeover
Protesters take over DC streets, police checkpoint following Trump's federal takeover

New York Post

time24 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Protesters take over DC streets, police checkpoint following Trump's federal takeover

Enraged protesters squared off against DC cops and tried to warn drivers to avoid a police checkpoint as President Trump's crime crackdown in the nation's capital continues. 'Why are you here? You are trying to arrest innocent people? What's your purpose? What's your goal? What's the motive?' one of the protesters lining the 14th Street Northwest corridor yelled at officers who had set up a traffic safety checkpoint. 3 The federal takeover of law enforcement in Washington, DC, entered its third day Wednesday, culminating in some arrests and protests. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement 'Why won't you show your face? Do you look yourself in the mirror and think 'I did a good job today?'' the activist brayed, as others shouted 'get off our streets!' waving signs that said 'ICE' and urging drivers to turn left to steer clear of the checkpoint. But it turns out the roadblock had nothing to do with the stepped-up enforcement effort and was part of a weekly safety compliance checkpoint that's been going on since 2023, the Metropolitan Police Department told Fox Digital. 3 Trump's crackdown also includes the disruption of entrenched homeless camps which litter many of the city's main thoroughfares. Getty Images Advertisement 'During the checkpoint, 344 vehicles passed through, 28 were stopped, 38 notice of infractions were issued, and MPD made one arrest for No Permit and Counterfeit Tags,' a spokesperson told the outlet. A handful of Homeland Security agents were also spotted at the checkpoint, the Washington Post reported, which wound down around 11 p.m. Wednesday. Homeless camps around the Capital were also cleaned up. Elsewhere in the capital on Wednesday, an illegal immigrant from Peru was detained by federal officers and threatened to hurt himself with a butcher knife after he was pulled over while driving his food truck. Advertisement 3 President Trump evoked section 740 of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, under which the president is authorized to take over local law enforcement agencies on an emergency basis for 30 days. AP 'Illegal Peruvian alien Jimmy Anderson Ayala Mayuri presented a large butcher knife to federal officers and motioned that he'd harm himself with it when we stopped his food truck on National Park Service property in DC today,' Immigration and Customs Enforcement wrote on X. The agency said Mayuri briefly barricaded himself inside the truck before he was taken into custody. Advertisement Trump announced Monday that the federal government was assuming control of police in DC in an effort to crack down on violent crime in the district. The National Guard was also deployed, as Trump told reporters the murder rate in the city has eclipsed those in Bogotá, Colombia, and Mexico City. The takeover was executed using section 740 of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, under which the commander-in-chief can assume control of local police on an emergency basis for a period of 30 days.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store