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Electric car appeal is at its lowest since 2019

Electric car appeal is at its lowest since 2019

Auto Express10 hours ago

It's been a manic few weeks. And here's the proof: my A-Z of the final days of the first half of 2025… on planet car.
Antonio Filosa wins the bravest in the business gong for taking on the CEO role at Stellantis. Good luck, Ant. You'll need it. BYD founder Wang Chuanfu is more relaxed as he plays with his Yangwang and Fangchengbao brands. China's Government warns car makers not to brutally undercut each other – I think they should. De Meo's decision to quit as Renault CEO is a tragedy. The industry can't afford to lose Luca – its best and most respected chief executive.
Electric car appeal is at its lowest since 2019 – at least in the US. Ferrari delays plans for a second EV thanks to lack of demand. Goodwood has an unlikely new lap record holder – an eight-year-old pedal car driver. HS2 is an 'appalling mess, a litany of failure,' says the Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander. Ideas for the Dragons' Den for Motorists stage at August's British Motor Show are being sought. Perhaps you have one? Jaguar remains disabled at the halfway point of the year. I've never known the firm to be saying, producing and selling less. It desperately needs its new plan to work. Kia's EV9 GT is marred by its greedy £82,000 price tag. Leaf EV from Nissan (starting at £30k-£35k) shows appropriate pricing is possible. Advertisement - Article continues below Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below
Musk's response to accusations of taking ketamine? A drugs test – which showed negative results, the Tesla boss says. Norris of McLaren crashed his F1 car then did what public figures rarely, if ever, do: admit guilt before apologising. Lando's honesty is refreshing.
OneHealth is Renault's new wellbeing scheme to give global employees access to physical and mental healthcare and should therefore be applauded. Power outages adversely affected me and many others last week – just as France's energy industry was signed up to keep the lights on and the EVs recharged in Britain this winter. Yikes!
Is Qoros the latest Chinese car brand bound for Britain? Maybe. Renault 4 the best car buy of the year so far? I think so. Suzuki's e Vitara: from £29,999, including free finance, home charger and a 10-year warranty. Tunnelling at Kent's Lower Thames Crossing will cost £9 billion, says the Government – which pays just £590 million towards it. Eh?
UN warning: autonomous cars could be a terrorist threat. VW's Polo wins the official Best Car of the Half Century ('75-'25) prompting a special edition. WOMAC's cancer charity run by motor industry women staged its annual fundraiser (I was honoured to attend) – but the wealthy car business should do more voluntary work like this.
X (as in Aygo X) emerges as Europe's 'cleanest' non plug-in car. Yuki Tsunoda wins my vote as worst-dressed driver at the F1 The Movie world premiere. Zero per cent finance deals are the new norm. At least that's what you must tell the hard-nosed sales execs you're negotiating with in the showroom!
Find a car with the experts New Volvo EX60 electric SUV: latest details and confirmed reveal date
New Volvo EX60 electric SUV: latest details and confirmed reveal date
The upcoming, all-electric Volvo XC60 alternative is designed to 'keep learning and evolve with time' New Skoda Epiq vRS to headline brand's hot-SUV onslaught
New Skoda Epiq vRS to headline brand's hot-SUV onslaught
Every future Skoda will get the go-faster treatment, with the brand also working on making cars sharper and more engaging Nissan Qashqai e-Power hybrid gets more efficient, powerful and eco-friendly for 2025
Nissan Qashqai e-Power hybrid gets more efficient, powerful and eco-friendly for 2025
The mid-size family SUV segment has just got a whole load tougher thanks to Nissan

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Bernie Ecclestone makes first F1 podium appearance, aged 94
Bernie Ecclestone makes first F1 podium appearance, aged 94

Telegraph

time31 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Bernie Ecclestone makes first F1 podium appearance, aged 94

There was a familiar feel to proceedings in Austria with McLaren winning their eighth race out of 11 this season. And there was a familiar face on the podium afterwards, with former F1 chief executive Bernie Ecclestone presenting race winner Lando Norris with the FIA president's medal. Somewhat remarkably, it transpired that it was Ecclestone's first ever trip to the podium. The 94-year-old, who ran Brabham for 15 years before running the sport for much of the next 50, revealed afterwards that he had never actually set foot on a podium before. As chief executive, Ecclestone famously used to leave races shortly after they started. 'I think it's really nice that the president gives a personal congratulations to the winning competitor,' Ecclestone said after performing his podium duties. 'As he [Mohammed Ben Sulayem] could not attend the Formula 1 race here in Austria, he asked me to present his medal for him, which I am pleased and honoured to do. 'It was also great to be there, as though it might seem strange, this was the first time in almost 70 years in this sport that I've actually been on the podium. So, that was also nice.' Bernie Ecclestone believes the strong competition currently in F1 will deny Lewis Hamilton a record eighth world title 🗣️❌ — Sky Sports F1 (@SkySportsF1) June 29, 2025 Never one to shy away from a tricky question, Ecclestone also had his say on Lewis Hamilton's prospects at Ferrari. Asked whether he thought the 40-year-old could win title No 8 with the Scuderia one day, he was emphatic. 'No. I think there's a period in people's lives when everything is going to work well or not work well, and he was fortunate enough to be around when, firstly, there wasn't so much competition, and secondly, now he's got competitors. When he was winning everything, he didn't have too many people at the top of the tree. 'He still can get the job done but, whether he can win the world championship where he is, is a completely different story.'

Trump's budget may cost millions healthcare as Senate debates bill
Trump's budget may cost millions healthcare as Senate debates bill

BBC News

time44 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Trump's budget may cost millions healthcare as Senate debates bill

A sprawling budget bill in the US Senate could cut healthcare for nearly 12 million Americans and add nearly $3.3 trillion in new debt, according to new assessement from the Congressional Budget Office, a non-partisan federal agency, is all but certain to complicate Republicans' efforts to pass Donald Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" in the coming days. It narrowly cleared a preliminary vote Saturday. Party leaders scrambled to win over lawmakers concerned about debt and the bill's healthcare cuts, among other critic, Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina, announced Sunday that he would not seek reelection after voting against the president's signature legislation. Democratic lawmakers have also criticised the bill, arguing it delivers tax cuts for the wealthy at the expense of vulnerable Americans. The CBO numbers calculate a $1 trillion (£730bn) cuts to healthcare funding if the bill passes. The latest version of the bill was brought to the Senate floor late Saturday night thanks to a 51-49 vote. Two Republicans joined Democrats in opposing the senators voted to open debate on the bill, it is unclear whether it has enough support to ultimately pass. Republicans have a small majority in the Senate with 53 seats. With vice-president JD Vance holding the tie-breaker vote, the party can only afford three senators are using chamber rules to force a reading of the nearly 1,000-page bill in an attempt to delay a vote on its Senate rules, lawmakers now have 20 hours allocated to debate the bill. It is expected that Democrats will use all of their time to further delay a vote, while Republicans will try to speed up the could also propose amendments to the bill. If the revised bill passes the Senate, it still must return to the House of Representatives for final approval before landing on the president's has pushed for a quick passage of the bill before a self-imposed 4 July deadline, and the White House said a failure to pass it would be the "ultimate betrayal".Senate Republicans advance Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' but final vote hangs in balanceA look at the key items in Trump's 'big, beautiful bill'Republican Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky has said he opposes the bill because it raises the US debt limit. Tillis voiced concern that the bill would cost his state billions of dollars in healthcare cited the cuts the bill proposes to Medicaid, a healthcare programme that is relied on by millions of elderly, disabled and low-income cuts have become a hotly debated issue on both sides of the Senator Mark Warner told CNN on Sunday that the bill will negatively impact millions. "This is tax cuts for the wealthiest to end up cutting health care, plain and simple," he Republican senators, however, have defended the bill as a needed step for the US government. Senator Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma told NBC on Sunday that the legislation aims to eliminate fraud, waste and abuse. He argued that many Americans using Medicaid are not under the poverty line."We don't pay people in this country to be lazy," he said. "We want to give them an opportunity. And when they're going through a hard time, we want to give them a helping hand." What is in the Big Beautiful Bill? Some parts of the spending bill were revised in the Senate in order to appease Republican still contains some of its core components: tax cuts that Trump campaigned on, such as a tax deduction on Social Security benefits, and the elimination of taxes on overtime work and would also extend tax cuts passed by Republicans in its latest estimate, the Congressional Budget Office said the measures in their current form would add at least $3.3 trillion to the national debt over the next bill proposes cuts to certain programmes in order to pay for the tax healthcare, the spending bill proposes a work requirement on most adults in order to qualify for benefits. It also reduces the amount of taxes states can charge medical providers, the funds from which are used heavily to finance Medicaid some Republican senators voiced concern that these cuts would negatively impact rural hospitals in their districts, lawmakers added a provision in the latest bill that increases the size of a rural hospital relief fund from $15bn to $25bn. The bill also includes additional restrictions on the US food stamps programme, by asking most adults with children 14 or older to show proof of work in order to qualify. It also shifts some costs from the federal government to states starting in 2028.

Red Bull lament ‘black day' for Max Verstappen's F1 title hopes
Red Bull lament ‘black day' for Max Verstappen's F1 title hopes

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Red Bull lament ‘black day' for Max Verstappen's F1 title hopes

The Red Bull motorsport adviser, Helmut Marko, described Max Verstappen's elimination from the Austrian Grand Prix as a 'black day', admitting the world champion's title ambitions were all but over. The remarks were echoed by the team principal, Christian Horner, who conceded the title fight was now a two-horse race. The race was won with a dominant one-two by McLaren's Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, but Verstappen played no part in it after he was struck by the Mercedes of Kimi Antonelli at turn three on the opening lap, knocking both cars out of the race. It leaves Verstappen 61 points adrift of Piastri in the championship, a lead that appears all but impossible to bridge given the pace advantage the McLaren enjoys over the rest of the field. 'This is a black day,' Marko said. 'The gap is almost impossible to make up. If nothing special happens, we have to assume that the championship is over. 'The McLarens, incredible, this pace in this heat. A half-second advantage per lap on this track. That's alarming. Especially in these high temperatures. That's a fact. This was a demonstration. We're not really sure how we're going to catch up.' Thirteen meetings remain but Red Bull look no closer to chasing down McLaren despite the upgrades they brought to Austria. Indeed Horner acknowledged that the form Norris and Piastri demonstrated at the Red Bull Ring was indicative of their enormous advantage, particularly in how well the McLaren works its tyres. 'It looks very much like a two-horse race,' Horner said. 'You could see how McLaren are racing each other. They've got a cushion to the rest. For us we just focus on one race at a time. We don't even think about championships. 'What's truly impressive is when you look at how close Oscar is able to run behind Lando with a car fat on fuel at the beginning of the race. He's basically making love to his exhaust pipe lap after lap and the tyres are not dying. 'That is their advantage. I can't see any other car that would be able to follow that closely and not grain the front tyres or the rear tyres.'

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