logo
Republican Vote Against E.V. Mandate Was Also a Vote Against California

Republican Vote Against E.V. Mandate Was Also a Vote Against California

New York Times26-05-2025

There is little question that California leaders already see fossil fuels as a relic of the past.
At the Southern California headquarters of the state's powerful clean-air regulator, the centerpiece art installation depicts in limestone a petrified gas station. Fuel nozzles lie on the ground in decay, evoking an imagined extinction of gas pumps.
For more than half a century, the federal government has allowed California to set its own stringent pollution limits, a practice that has resulted in more efficient vehicles and the nation's most aggressive push toward electric cars. Many Democratic-led states have adopted California's standards, prompting automakers to move their national fleets in the same direction.
With that unusual power, however, has come resentment from Republican states where the fossil fuel industry still undergirds their present and future. When Republicans in Congress last week revoked the state's authority to set three of its mandates on electric vehicles and trucks, they saw it not just as a policy reversal but also as a statement that liberal California should be put in its place.
'We've created a superstate system where California has more rights than other states,' Representative Morgan Griffith, who represents rural southwestern Virginia, said in an interview. 'My constituents think most folks in California are out of touch with reality. You see this stuff coming out of California and say, 'What?''
Federal law typically pre-empts state law under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution. But in 1967, the federal government allowed smoggy California to receive waivers from the Environmental Protection Agency to enact its own clean-air standards that were tougher than federal limits, because the state historically had some of the most polluted air in the nation. Federal law also allows other states to adopt California's standards as their own under certain circumstances.
California has used that authority to build one of the world's most powerful environmental agencies, the California Air Resources Board. The board now regulates the airborne emissions released by everything from perfumes to power plants. Products that repeatedly fail to comply with its standards can be barred from sale in the state.
So many consumers live in California or in states like New York and Pennsylvania that adopt the same standards that manufacturers see little to be gained by making their products in two versions, one to satisfy those states' rules and another for the rest of the country. So California's requirements often become de facto national standards.
The policy that has drawn the most Republican opposition has been California's mandate to ban the sale of new gasoline-powered vehicles starting in 2035.
Republicans, whose party has strong ties to the oil industry, spoke last week about why electric vehicles would be impractical for their constituents.
Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming, the second-ranking Republican in the Senate, said on the floor that electric vehicles' limited range made them unsuitable for farmers, ranchers and others in his rural state who must drive long distances each day.
Though California's rules would not bar the sale of gasoline-powered vehicles anywhere else, Mr. Barrasso and other Republicans suggested that without the California market, manufacturers would curb their production.
'Every American would lose options — whether you live in California or not,' Mr. Barrasso said. 'California's E.V. mandates ban the sale of gas-powered cars and trucks. No more in America. Can you imagine that in Oklahoma or my home state of Wyoming?'
Their arguments also ventured into the ideological realm. In floor arguments and in statements to The New York Times, Republican lawmakers spoke of what the technology — and California — represented to the wider populace.
'The American public on Election Day rejected the liberal agenda of California, whether it comes to E.V.s, whether it comes to open borders, whether it comes to sanctuary cities, a sanctuary state, their efforts to defund police,' Mr. Barrasso said in his floor speech.
Other Republican lawmakers condemned what they called California's 'extreme environmental agenda.' Representative Troy Nehls, Republican of Texas, said in a statement that the 'radical liberal state of California' should not be governing for the 'hard-working patriots in my district.'
Mr. Nehls is the House author of the Stop California from Advancing Regulatory Burden Act of 2025. It is otherwise known as the Stop C.A.R.B. Act, an indication of just how large California's air board — known by its initials, C.A.R.B. — looms in the eyes of Republicans. That bill, which would repeal the section of the Clean Air Act that lets California get waivers to set its own regulations, is pending in the House, as is a similar measure in the Senate.
In the 1960s and 1970s, the smog in Los Angeles was so thick that the giant Hollywood sign often could not be seen from just a few miles away. .
Over the years, C.A.R.B. sharply reduced the state's pollution problem by enacting stringent rules, many of which were eventually adopted nationwide. California's regulatory climate encouraged technical innovations like the low-emission engine that Honda produced in the 1970s; the three-way catalytic converter with an oxygen sensor that Volvo pioneered later that decade; and Tesla's popularization of electric vehicles.
Ann Carlson, who helped write policies for the Biden administration on tailpipe emissions and now teaches law at the University of California, Los Angeles, recalled the severe smog that made her eyes burn and her lungs ache when she was a child in Southern California in the 1960s. The bad air was a product of the postwar explosion in population across a vast area of the Los Angeles basin, high rates of car ownership and topography that tended to trap smog, she said.
'Cars today are 99.5 percent cleaner than they were when they had no emission control,' Ms. Carlson said. 'That's almost all because of California.'
Crucial to California's efforts was Mary Nichols, an environmental attorney who helped transform the state air board into an international power.
Her leadership was so influential that the agency dedicated its Southern California office to her. In 2022, Ms. Nichols and other California leaders christened the new building by cutting a gasoline hose with a pair of oversized shears.
On Friday, the day after the Senate vote, Ms. Nichols sounded sanguine about the fact that California — and the work of her former agency — was being targeted by federal lawmakers.
'That's the price you pay for success, I suppose,' Ms. Nichols, who lives in Los Angeles, said in an interview. 'We're in a period of lashing out against all kinds of progress, and that's what C.A.R.B. represents.'
She said that the federal government over the years had sent members of the board's staff to India, China and Russia to help other countries with their smog problems. In turn, delegates from countries around the world have visited Sacramento to learn about what the state has done to reduce its emissions, she said.
Is California trying to influence national policy?
'There's no question about that,' Ms. Nichols said. But she added, 'It's not a crusade to make the rest of the world look like California. It's a recognition that we've been privileged to be able to pioneer some very good technologies, and we're pleased to be able to share them with the world.'
Senator Adam Schiff, Democrat of California, said that he thought Republicans were upset that so many states wanted to follow California's lead.
'Their overarching goal was not energy independence,' Mr. Schiff said. 'Their overarching goal was oil dependence, and California was making the country less dependent on oil.'
Senator Alex Padilla, Democrat of California, suggested that Republicans were acting counter to the states' rights philosophy that had been a core principle of their party. And he warned that Republicans were giving China an economic advantage, as electric vehicles become essential around the world.
'It's wrongheaded that they have it in for California as badly as they do,' he said.
The three bills passed by the Senate Thursday had already been approved by the House, and President Trump is expected to sign them all. To pass the bills, though, the Senate acted against a ruling by its own nonpartisan parliamentarian, who said that it was inappropriate to use the provisions of the Congressional Review Act in the way the Senate did, to revoke California's clean air waivers and to avoid a filibuster.
Rob Bonta, California's Democratic attorney general, has said he would sue the federal government if the bills became law. Mr. Bonta and Gov. Gavin Newsom denounced the congressional moves at a news conference Thursday, and displayed a sign declaring that 'Trump's G.O.P. Is Making America Smoggy Again.'
Mr. Griffith, the Virginia representative, said he thought electric vehicles might be all right for California but were not suitable for his large, mountainous district and the cold winter weather of central Appalachia. And he argued that it did not make sense for California policies to influence Virginia.
'They're different from us,' Mr. Griffith said. 'They don't think the same way we think.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Medline signs agreement with Ohio State University to supply medical products
Medline signs agreement with Ohio State University to supply medical products

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Medline signs agreement with Ohio State University to supply medical products

Supply chain solutions provider Medline has entered into a prime vendor agreement with The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center for the supply of a portfolio of medical-surgical products. The agreement also involves supply chain optimisation solutions to over 100 facilities within the health system. It aims to enhance the health system's operational efficiency and clinical delivery objectives. Medline executive account director Tiffany Sancin said: 'Our advanced distribution capabilities, coupled with our cutting-edge technology, enable us to support the medical centre in scaling their operations effectively. This agreement underscores how our ability to scale is key as they expand their footprint to meet the growing demands of their health system.' The distribution of products and services will be facilitated by Medline's centre located in West Jefferson, Ohio, US, which features AutoStore warehouse automation and software technology. The company will leverage its MedTrans trucks. Established in 2023, this facility is engineered to enhance order execution and operational efficiency and is part of Medline's extensive network of 45 distribution centres in the US. Medline vice-president of regional operations Amanda Lovelace-Tobicash said: 'Our West Jefferson team is dedicated to supporting The Ohio State Wexner Medical Center as they continue to grow. 'Our team's commitment is evident through our industry-leading infrastructure, which utilises the latest technology and innovation to ensure next-day delivery to 95% of all our US customers. This level of service is what allows us to support the West Jefferson team's hard work and dedication to all Ohioans.' This agreement follows a similar prime vendor distribution agreement signed by Medline in October last year with Kaweah Health, a California-based community hospital. Through this multi-year agreement, Medline assisted Kaweah Health in maintaining patient care while achieving cost savings. "Medline signs agreement with Ohio State University to supply medical products" was originally created and published by Hospital Management, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

RedMagic's 10S Pro Is One of the Most Powerful Phones I've Ever Tested
RedMagic's 10S Pro Is One of the Most Powerful Phones I've Ever Tested

CNET

time35 minutes ago

  • CNET

RedMagic's 10S Pro Is One of the Most Powerful Phones I've Ever Tested

The RedMagic 10S Pro gaming phone, announced Thursday, might be the most powerful Android phone of 2025 so far, and it has quite the power boost over last year's RedMagic 10 Pro. The new device, which starts at $699 (£579, roughly converts to AU$1,230) for 12GB of memory and 256GB of storage, includes a "Leading Edition" of the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite processor. My review unit is the midlevel $849 model with 16GB of memory and 512GB of storage, while RedMagic's highest-end model is $999 for 24GB of memory and 1TB of storage. But power is clearly the showcase of the 10S Pro, and in my early benchmarks using the graphically demanding 3D Wild Life Extreme test, the phone pulls one of the highest scores I've ever seen. The 10S Pro heartily beats last year's 10 Pro and the Asus ROG Phone 9 Pro, which run on the earlier edition of the Elite processor. The 10S Pro even beats the $1,300 Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra while costing hundreds of dollars less. RedMagic 10S Pro benchmark tests vs. RedMagic 10 Pro, Asus ROG Phone 9 Pro, Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra 3DMark Wild Life Extreme Geekbench 6.0 RedMagic 10S Pro 7,193; 43.07fps Single: 3,050; Multi: 9,586 RedMagic 10 Pro 5,869; 35.15fps Single: 3,123; Multi: 9,756 Asus ROG Phone 9 Pro 5,923; 35.47fps Single: 3,075; Multi: 9,710 Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra 6,950; 41.62 fps Single: 3,053; Multi: 9,707 In the more computationally focused Geekbench 6.0, the RedMagic 10S Pro scores comparably with the phones from Asus and Samsung. In real-world use, this means the phone easily handles high frame rates and graphics settings in Android games that provide them. I often test Mortal Kombat Mobile and Dead Cells since both titles include support for high frame rates, and the phone quickly boots them up while running at 120 to 144 frames per second. I similarly had confidence in cranking up the graphics in other titles like Asphalt Legends, in which cars go flying in frequent collisions. And in a test that is less reliant on the processor, I used Xbox Cloud Gaming to play Doom: The Dark Ages, which benefits from the uninterrupted 1.5K-resolution display (2,688x1,216 pixels) that places the front-facing camera behind the display. Playing Doom: The Dark Ages over Xbox Cloud Gaming. Mike Sorrentino/CNET That 6.85-inch display is largely the same as the RedMagic 10 Pro's, which runs at a 144Hz refresh rate and can reach a peak brightness of 2,000 nits. The screen also includes the same 960Hz touch sampling rate, meaning it's very responsive to quick taps in games that rely on that. RedMagic says the 10S Pro also gets an improved cooling system, and its 7,050-mAh battery can recharge at 80W speeds. RedMagic's phones also include a suite of gaming optimization software, which lets you adjust settings such as the power consumption of games, the option to force titles to run in vertical or horizontal orientation, and customizable controls that include using shoulder-button-style sensors or a virtual joypad with buttons. Fans of RedMagic phones who don't already own the RedMagic 10 Pro will likely appreciate the upgrades offered here, especially in terms of performance. RedMagic also improved its software update support with the 10S Pro, with a company representative stating that it will get three years of both major software updates and security support. While that's nowhere near the seven years of support we're seeing from Google and Samsung, it's much better than the RedMagic 10 Pro, which is only receiving one major software update and three years of security updates. The 16-megapixel front-facing camera is underneath the display. Mike Sorrentino/CNET RedMagic's phones are still tougher to recommend outside of the gaming-focused audience who understand that the device's biggest selling point is the powerful specs sheet. When setting up the phone, I still encounter a lot of software enabled by default that interferes with enjoying the phone out of the box. This includes a camera watermark that needs to be turned off to avoid turning every photo you take into an advertisement for RedMagic, a RedMagic-specific news feed that replaces the Google version that's typically seen on Android, and a few apps that cannot be uninstalled, like Daily Wallpaper. This photo at CNET's New York office was taken on the 16-megapixel front-facing camera on the RedMagic 10S Pro. This selfie camera is underneath the display. Mike Sorrentino/CNET The camera is also a much lower priority for a phone like this, especially since the 16-megapixel under-display selfie camera will make you appear a bit fuzzy on video calls. This is the same photo at CNET's New York office, but taken on the 50-megapixel main camera. Mike Sorrentino/CNET The rear camera system includes a 50-megapixel main camera, a 50-megapixel ultrawide camera and a 2-megapixel camera that's said to enhance photo quality in certain modes. The camera's lenses are flush with the phone's body and do not have a bump. While the Asus ROG Phone 9 costs more money at $1,000 and is now -- on a power level -- slower than the 10S Pro, it offers a more balanced experience between being a phone, camera and gaming device. Its software is closer to a stock Android experience, but it does offer lots of gaming optimizations, similar to what RedMagic provides on this phone. But if you're a big Android gamer and want the most powerful specs for less money -- and you understand the tradeoffs RedMagic makes to achieve this -- the 10S Pro is currently the most graphically powerful phone out there until the next wave of gaming phones arrives.

The tax break that even fiscal hawks don't want to end
The tax break that even fiscal hawks don't want to end

Politico

time36 minutes ago

  • Politico

The tax break that even fiscal hawks don't want to end

Presented by Editor's note: Morning Money is a free version of POLITICO Pro Financial Services morning newsletter, which is delivered to our subscribers each morning at 5:15 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the day's biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro. Quick Fix As Senate fiscal hawks prepare to blow up the House GOP's 'big beautiful bill' for fueling the deficit, there's one item they won't touch: a politically popular business tax deduction that has been widely criticized for lacking broad economic benefit. The deduction for qualified 'pass-through' business income, which is not subject to corporate taxes but instead individual income tax, was included in the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The vast majority of businesses in the U.S. are pass-through entities — sole proprietorships, partnerships, and LLCs among others — and it's estimated that 43 percent of the workforce was employed by them, as of 2021. The House megabill would slightly increase the so-called Section 199a deduction, which is set to expire at the end of the year, and make it permanent. But doing so would amount to a fairly significant government revenue hit –– almost $820 billion over 10 years, according to the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation. The resistance to ending the deduction illustrates how difficult it will be to scale back the megabill while negotiations take place over the 1,000-page reconciliation package, even for an item that critics say offers few economic gains. Tax policy experts and economists argue that the program primarily rewards the wealthiest business owners. But even for the most fiscally minded Republicans, the political stakes are too high to consider a world without the deduction. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), one of the Senate's most vocal critics of the House GOP megabill, said he's not concerned about the federal revenue decrease the deduction is estimated to cause. 'I've said repeatedly I would just extend current tax law, because had we been smart enough back in 2017 to use current policy, none of this would have expired already, and we need to return that kind of certainty,' said Johnson, who pushed for the deduction in the original TCJA. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, another Republican who has been critical of the megabill, said he still supports the small business deduction. And Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) said the deduction 'is a very important part of the bill' that he believes will be included when it's passed and would be part of 'a major win.' The House bill would allow individuals, trusts and estates to deduct up to 23 percent of qualified business income from taxable income, up from the current 20 percent threshold. Tax policy experts said they expect Congress to make the measure permanent but were surprised at the increase in the deduction. The White House is also backing it. And the small business lobby is confident the deduction will be enshrined in a final reconciliation bill. Even with overwhelming political support, critics across the small business and economic policy universe say the provision is costly, susceptible to tax avoidance, and won't stimulate the economy. 'Frankly, to me, it sort of just seems like an extra tax break for certain types of taxpayers that doesn't seem particularly warranted from a policy perspective,' said Miles Johnson, a senior attorney adviser at the Tax Law Center at NYU Law. Samantha Jacoby, the deputy director of federal tax policy at the nonpartisan Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, said there aren't any advantages to increasing and making permanent the pass-through deduction. The policy has 'created a big wedge' between business owners and employees who are now paying a higher tax rate than their employers. 'Despite being almost universally panned by economists and other tax policy experts,' the influence of politically powerful businesses located in every district is part of the reason the provision is popular and pervasive among Republicans, Jacoby said. Economic growth is one of the main arguments for proponents of the deduction, but policy experts disagree. Economists say there's a lack of evidence from the original deduction that there was any boost to real economic activity or employment that came from the pass-through business rate cut. 'I would categorize 199A as a business tax cut that is not pro-growth,' said Kyle Pomerleau, a federal tax policy senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. 'It is a policy that I think generally loses a lot of revenue for no good reason.' IT'S THURSDAY — Any small business, insurance or financial services tips please send to your MM host at khapgood@ And, as always, send your tips, suggestions and personnel moves to Sam at ssutton@ Driving the day The SEC's Investment Management Division hosts a conference on 'Emerging Trends in Asset Management' with speakers including Commissioner Hester Peirce beginning at 9 a.m. … The SEC meets at 10 a.m. … House Small Business holds a hearing on 'How Private Equity Empowers Main Street' at 10 a.m. … House Financial Services holds a hearing on data privacy at 10 a.m. … Fed Governor Adriana Kugler speaks at the Economic Club of New York at noon.. The Urban Institute holds a virtual discussion on 'rent reporting as a pathway to credit building' at 12:30 p.m. … The Peterson Institute for International Economics holds a virtual discussion on industrial policy for Asia and the Pacific at 5 p.m. … In The Economy First in MM: New research from the Committee on Capital Markets Regulation, which has members in the finance, business, law, accounting and academic worlds, found no effect on consumer prices across sectors from having competing firms with common investors. The study looked at 52 industries, representing the majority of GDP, over a 24-year period (2000-2023), per our Victoria Guida. The finding comes as some Republican state attorneys general are alleging in a lawsuit that Vanguard, BlackRock and State Street have violated antitrust laws by colluding to reduce coal production. The market's mixed — Bonds rallied and stocks finished mixed after weak economic data boosted investors' confidence that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates in the coming months. Services activity unexpectedly contracted in May, according to the Institute for Supply Management purchasing managers index, while ADP data showed 37,000 jobs were created, the slowest pace of private-sector hiring in more than two years, the Wall Street Journal reports. Department of Labor staffing shortage raises CPI concerns — Some economists are beginning to question the accuracy of recent U.S. inflation data after the federal government said staffing shortages hampered its ability to conduct a massive monthly survey, the Journal reports. What small businesses are saying — As the Senate mulls changes to the 'big, beautiful bill,' small businesses are raising red flags about the uncertainty pertaining to both taxes and trade. More than 90 percent said that certainty and predictability in the federal tax code are important to their financial planning, according to the latest Goldman Sachs 10,000 Small Businesses Voices survey. More than 35 percent said they were feeling negative effects from tariffs and another 38 percent said they expect to feel the effects of those policies in the future. Fifty-one percent said they would be unable to take out a loan at current interest rates. TRADE CORNER More Carney-Trump negotiations on steel and aluminum — Ontario Premier Doug Ford is urging Canada's prime minister to retaliate against the United States after it doubled tariffs on steel and aluminum imports. But Prime Minister Mark Carney is holding off, arguing that he's close to striking a new trade deal with President Donald Trump, Mickey Djuric reports. On The Hill Senate Banking's planned megabill cuts — Senate Banking Committee Republicans are preparing to propose provisions that would change Federal Reserve employees' pay scale and zero out the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's funding as part of the Senate version of the GOP megabill, according to a committee staff memo obtained by POLITICO, Jasper Goodman reports. The big, beautiful national debt — Trump is pursuing an agenda that would add trillions of dollars to the soaring national debt, ignoring warnings from Wall Street, Republican deficit hawks and his outgoing cost-cutting champion, The Post reports. CRYPTO CORNER JP Morgan to take crypto as collateral — JPMorgan Chase & Co. plans to let trading and wealth management clients use some cryptocurrency-linked assets as collateral for loans, a major step by the largest U.S. bank to make inroads into an industry that Trump has pledged to support, Bloomberg reports. Pro-crypto dems look to delay market structure markup — House Financial Services Democrats who are open to backing GOP-led cryptocurrency legislation are pressing committee Chair French Hill (R-Ark.) to delay a vote on his sweeping market structure bill, saying they need more time to negotiate changes, Jasper reports. At the regulators SEC opens the door — The SEC is weighing an overhaul to decades-old rules outlining what types of foreign companies trading in the U.S. should be subject to a lighter-touch reporting regime, our Declan Harty reports. Fed's top bank cop gets confirmed — The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Trump's pick to serve as the Fed's top official overseeing banks, installing a key regulator who is poised to advance the administration's financial deregulatory agenda, per Michael Stratford. Senators voted 48-46, along party lines, to confirm Fed Gov. Michelle Bowman as the central bank's vice chair for supervision. Atkins eyes long-time trading executive for SEC — Chair Paul Atkins is eyeing Jamie Selway, a former Wall Street executive who has advised cryptocurrency firms, to lead his trading and markets division, according to two people familiar with the matter who were granted anonymity to discuss the still-private deliberations, Declan reports. The AIC's private credit pitch — The American Investment Council released a new report by EY that estimates private credit investments have supported companies with more than 811,000 employees — more than 200,000 of whom are in the manufacturing sector. Jobs report Rustin Finkler joined Early Warning Services as a director for public affairs communications this week. Prior to joining EWS, Rustin was a managing director at Vision360 Partners, a public relations firm, where he worked on public affairs and communication plans for clients like the Consumer Bankers Association. He is also a Penta Group alum. Kari Heerman will join the Brookings Institution's economic studies program as a senior fellow and director of trade and economic statecraft on Aug. 11. Heerman, who was previously acting chief economist at the State Department, will lead a new effort to expand and coordinate cross-program work already being done at Brookings.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store