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Coalition of GOP AGs celebrate win against California's clean-truck rule
Coalition of GOP AGs celebrate win against California's clean-truck rule

The Hill

time06-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • The Hill

Coalition of GOP AGs celebrate win against California's clean-truck rule

A coalition of Republican attorneys general is claiming victory against California following the state's pledge to repeal its electric-truck mandate amid an ongoing lawsuit. California Attorney General Rob Bonta and Steve Cliff, executive officer of the California Air Resources Board, agreed in a settlement on Monday to propose the elimination of multiple portions of California's Advanced Clean Fleets regulation: its rule that has aimed to accelerate the transition to zero-emissions trucks. The settlement occurred in response to a lawsuit filed by 17 attorneys general who disputed the idea that the rule would be targeting 'any fleet that operated in California regardless of where the fleet is headquartered.' 'Given California's large population and access to international ports, this rule would have had nationwide effects on the supply chain,' the attorneys general said in a statement. As part of the settlement, Cliff agreed to propose the repeal of 'the High-Priority Fleet and Drayage Fleet Requirements,' which refers to on-road vehicles that transport containers and bulk goods to and from sea-yards and rail-yards Bonta and Cliff also conceded that they would not enforce the part of the regulation that would have required 100-percent, zero-emission-vehicle sales in the trucking sector beginning with model-year 2036. The plaintiffs, meanwhile, agreed that if California finalizes the repeals, they would dismiss their lawsuit. 'This is not only a victory for the trucking industry — it is also a victory for consumers and common sense,' West Virginia Attorney General JB McCuskey said in a statement. 'This mandate would have crippled the trucking industry and driven up consumer pricing,' he added. Joining McCuskey in the petition were the attorneys general of Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Utah and Wyoming. Also supporting them were the Nebraska Trucking Association and the Arizona State Legislature. McCuskey praised his colleagues for standing 'up to California to prevent them from pushing their obsession with electric vehicle onto the rest of the country.'

New ‘Climate Superfund' Laws Face Widening Legal Challenges
New ‘Climate Superfund' Laws Face Widening Legal Challenges

New York Times

time02-05-2025

  • Business
  • New York Times

New ‘Climate Superfund' Laws Face Widening Legal Challenges

Vermont made history last year when it enacted the country's first climate superfund law. It's designed to let the state recover money from fossil fuel companies to help pay the rising costs of climate change. If the law can survive intensifying legal challenges, that is. On Thursday, the Justice Department filed federal lawsuits against Vermont and New York, the only other state to have enacted a climate superfund law, arguing that the measures were 'a brazen attempt to grab power from the federal government' and force others to pay for the states' infrastructure spending. Hours later, West Virginia's attorney general, John B. McCuskey, announced that he was leading another challenge to Vermont's law, saying the measure would 'fine America's coal, oil and natural gas suppliers into oblivion.' Mr. McCuskey had already filed a similar lawsuit against New York's law, which seeks $75 billion from oil and gas companies over the next 25 years. On Thursday, he said Vermont's version might be 'even more dangerous' because it has no monetary cap. He and 23 other attorneys general are seeking to join a lawsuit filed late last year by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, in federal court in Vermont. West Virginia is a major producer of natural gas and coal. Its complaint argues that the activities of fossil-fuel companies are legal and that 'Vermont seeks to have its cake and eat it too, by both reaping the benefits of affordable and reliable fuel, yet penalizing the entities that help produce such fuel.' The climate superfund laws are modeled on the federal Superfund program to clean up hazardous waste sites. Under that program, which has been in existence for decades, old waste dumps or contaminated industrial sites are cleaned up and the companies that contributed to the contamination must help pay the cleanup bill. The new climate superfund laws are based on the fact that the burning of fossil fuels, which produces planet-warming carbon dioxide and other gases, is the main driver of climate change. So the laws allow states to seek money from fossil fuel producers to help cover the costs of global warming. Similar bills are gaining momentum in several other states, including California, New Jersey and Massachusetts. Patrick Parenteau, an environmental law expert at Vermont Law and Graduate School, called the Justice Department cases 'virtue signaling' and said he expected them to be dismissed. In the Chamber of Commerce lawsuit, he expects the state to argue that the lawsuit is premature, since officials are still in the midst of deciding how to apply the law, and that the chamber has no standing to sue since it is not directly affected by the measure. Julie Moore, secretary of the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources, who is named in both filings, said her office was reviewing the details of the cases. She added that the Justice Department action was 'not unexpected' given President Trump's April 8 executive order, 'Protecting American Energy From State Overreach.' That order specifically cited the new Vermont and New York laws, calling them akin to extortion and saying they threaten the country's economic and national security. Letitia James, the attorney general of New York, who is named in the Justice Department lawsuit, said Thursday that the climate superfund law 'ensures that those who contributed to the climate crisis help pay for the damage they caused.' Meghan Greenfield, an environmental lawyer who previously worked at the Justice Department and Environmental Protection Agency and is now a partner at the firm Jenner & Block, said legal challenges to such a novel law were inevitable. Some of the arguments being used against the measures are also new and untested in this context, like one about 'equal sovereignty' between states, which is the idea that they should be treated uniformly by the federal government, she said. 'It's kind of hard to predict how it all will go, because we're looking at different layers here, a new kind of law, and new kinds of challenges against that law,' she said. She said she expected further challenges to more traditional state climate laws as well, such as New York and California measures that specify how much of a state's power supply should come from clean energy.

West Virginia governor looks like a clown fighting March Madness snub: Opinion
West Virginia governor looks like a clown fighting March Madness snub: Opinion

USA Today

time19-03-2025

  • Politics
  • USA Today

West Virginia governor looks like a clown fighting March Madness snub: Opinion

West Virginia governor looks like a clown fighting March Madness snub: Opinion Do you know what sports fans hate more than NCAA Tournament injustice? A gasbag governor grandstanding to his political base. Show Caption Hide Caption The Florida Gators lead dominant SEC conference in NCAA tournament USAT's Jordan Mendoza talks about Florida taking the SEC over the Vols and how the SEC could dominate the March Madness down to the Final Four. Sports Seriously Watching West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey and his attorney general John McCuskey prattle on at a Monday news conference, demanding accountability and threatening legal remedies over — wait for it — the NCAA basketball tournament selection process, you might have wondered if this was all a setup for Kenan Thompson to run out on stage and yell 'Live from New York, it's Saturday Niiiiiiiiight!' A mere 18 hours after the Mountaineers were controversially snubbed from March Madness in favor of North Carolina, there was really only one thing that could kill the national sympathy being directed toward Morgantown. And wouldn't you know it, the politicians didn't disappoint. Do you know what sports fans hate more than an NCAA tournament injustice? A gasbag governor and his obsequious sidekick grandstanding to their political base, sticking their nose into a place it doesn't belong and making a mockery of the real problems in a state that has plenty of them. Seriously, gentlemen: Do you not have better things to do? 'This was a miscarriage of justice and robbery at the highest levels,' Morrisey said. 'This thing reeks of corruption.' Is that similar to the smell emanated by a former Washington, D.C. lobbyist for the pharmaceutical industry who ran for office in West Virginia on a platform of fighting the opioid epidemic? Just wondering. There used to be a time in America when ambitious politicians, and particularly Republicans like Morrisey and McCuskey, would have railed against the idea of running to the courtroom to litigate any perceived minor injustice. Ah, well, nevertheless. Instead, we had Morrisey not only refusing to rule out the possibility of seeking an injunction if the NCAA doesn't cooperate immediately with McCuskey's investigation but also suggesting the West Virginia snub might have been retribution for the state suing the NCAA in 2023 over basketball player RaeQuan Battle's eligibility. 'A lot of people said, 'What are you doing?'' Morrisey said. 'We sent multiple letters they didn't respond adequately to and we fundamentally helped change the transfer eligibility rules. So I think the answer is when you're talking about multi-billion dollar businesses and universities that have a big stake in the outcome, absolutely (it's worthwhile).' Of course, one big difference: In the Battle lawsuit, West Virginia was challenging whether the NCAA's transfer rules violated antitrust laws on behalf of a citizen fighting for his rights. But this? This is just a whole lot of whining on behalf of a basketball team that lost 13 of its 32 games including to Colorado in the Big 12 tournament. And it's not even really clear what they hope to gain, other than a mention of 'objective criteria' for the NCAA tournament selection process. Which, if you have followed the selection process for any length of time, is like trying to explain why 'Anora' won Best Picture over 'Conclave.' There is no objective criteria. That's the point. And West Virginia, like every other Div. 1 school, not only knew that going in but agreed to it. Now, does that mean the committee got it right? No. West Virginia's exclusion was stunning, given that every 'bracketologist' who does this either as a job or a hobby had the Mountaineers in the field. And as we addressed Sunday night, the fact that North Carolina athletics director Bubba Cunningham chairs the selection committee isn't a great look when the final decision was literally UNC over West Virginia. In cases like this, the recusal procedures to ensure Cunningham wasn't part of the discussion or votes involving UNC don't protect the NCAA from accusations of favoritism. That gave Morrisey the opening to pounce, and if it wasn't him, it could just as easily have been the governor of Texas if the Longhorns got left out instead of the Mountaineers. 'UNC had representation in the room,' Morrisey said. 'It's being reported by a number of outlets that Cunningham had a significant bonus incentive, at least $70,000, to get into the tournament, arguably more if they advanced. I want folks to let that sink in for just a minute." Even if Cunningham did everything by the book, the selection process has long been plagued by suspicions that committee members will do their best to take care of buddies who work at other schools. And even if Cunningham never even hinted at lobbying for the Tar Heels, these committee members are colleagues and often friends who spend a lot of time with each other inside and outside the committee room during this process. So something like what happened Sunday only turbocharges conspiracy theories, and it's worth looking at whether athletics directors and conference commissioners should be the ones making these tough calls when there's so much on the line financially. But that's a matter for the leaders of college sports to reckon with — not elected officials who love to use this stuff to make it seem like they're fighting for the common man or woman when we all know it's political theater. McCuskey, the attorney general, even sounded more like a message board poster than a chief law enforcement officer in repeatedly referring to the Mountaineers as 'we' and making the case that a basketball team with guard Javon Small would have a chance to beat anyone in the country. In the end, it was deeply embarrassing for the people of West Virginia. Just like it was when some Florida politicians did the same thing after Florida State got left out of the 2023 College Football Playoff. And just like the group of legislators in Georgia, Alabama and Illinois that have recently tried to pass bills giving college athletes an exemption from state income tax on their NIL deals. In fact, it's probably not a stretch to say that no group of people has consistently done more to turn public opinion back toward the NCAA on a variety of issues than state-level legislators doing ridiculous things on behalf of college sports because they think it will win them more votes in the next election. Similar to most of those efforts, Monday's news conference was almost as funny as a variety show. Only it happened in real life, in the state of West Virginia, instead of on the SNL set where it belonged.

West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey to investigate WVU's absence from NCAA Tournament
West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey to investigate WVU's absence from NCAA Tournament

CBS News

time18-03-2025

  • Politics
  • CBS News

West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey to investigate WVU's absence from NCAA Tournament

On Monday, West Virginia Governor Patrick Morrisey, along with West Virginia Attorney General JB McCuskey announced they would be launching an investigation into West Virginia University Men's Basketball not being selected for the NCAA tournament. "For the NCAA to leave WVU out of the tournament is a miscarriage of justice and a robbery at the highest level," Gov. Morrisey said. "It's favoritism at best and corruption at worst. I am asking West Virginia's Attorney General to conduct a full investigation, demand transparency, and root out any corruption." Gov. Morrisey pointed to the University of North Carolina's Athletic Director, Lawrence "Bubba" Cunningham serving as chairman of the selection committee for the 68 teams picked to play in the tournament and UNC was the final team selected for the tournament while WVU was the first team out. The governor went on to cite that the team had six "Quad 1" wins this season and also went 9-0 against "Quad 3" and "Quad 4" teams, as well as scoring wins over three AP top 10 teams. "Given the major event that the tournament has become and the massive amount of money associated with it, all fans deserve to know how the selection committee makes its choices," said AG McCuskey. "The selection committee of the past is antiquated and it is time for change, to lead with data-driven results and transparency." AG McCuskey sent a letter to the NCAA, asking for clarity on things such as player availability, objective criteria, how that criteria is weighted in the process, and how the committee reaches a consensus. "Obviously, we are extremely shocked, saddened, and disappointed with not being selected for the NCAA Tournament, "WVU Coach Darian DeVries said to the Associated Press . "We strongly believe that we have a resume that is worthy of an NCAA Tournament team." The NCAA Tournament "First Four" round begins tomorrow night when St. Francis takes on Alabama State and then UNC will play San Diego State.

Opinion: Fighting March Madness snub, West Virginia governor looks like a clown
Opinion: Fighting March Madness snub, West Virginia governor looks like a clown

USA Today

time18-03-2025

  • Politics
  • USA Today

Opinion: Fighting March Madness snub, West Virginia governor looks like a clown

Opinion: Fighting March Madness snub, West Virginia governor looks like a clown Do you know what sports fans hate more than NCAA Tournament injustice? A gasbag governor grandstanding to his political base. Show Caption Hide Caption The Florida Gators lead dominant SEC conference in NCAA tournament USAT's Jordan Mendoza talks about Florida taking the SEC over the Vols and how the SEC could dominate the March Madness down to the Final Four. Sports Seriously Watching West Virginia governor Patrick Morrisey and his attorney general John McCuskey prattle on at a Monday news conference, demanding accountability and threatening legal remedies over — wait for it — the NCAA basketball tournament selection process, you might have wondered if this was all a setup for Kenan Thompson to run out on stage and yell 'Live from New York, it's Saturday Niiiiiiiiight!' A mere 18 hours after the Mountaineers were controversially snubbed from March Madness in favor of North Carolina, there was really only one thing that could kill the national sympathy being directed toward Morgantown. And wouldn't you know it, the politicians didn't disappoint. Do you know what sports fans hate more than an NCAA tournament injustice? A gasbag governor and his obsequious sidekick grandstanding to their political base, sticking their nose into a place it doesn't belong and making a mockery of the real problems in a state that has plenty of them. Seriously, gentlemen: Do you not have better things to do? 'This was a miscarriage of justice and robbery at the highest levels,' Morrisey said. 'This thing reeks of corruption.' Is that similar to the smell emanated by a former Washington, D.C. lobbyist for the pharmaceutical industry who ran for office in West Virginia on a platform of fighting the opioid epidemic? Just wondering. There used to be a time in America when ambitious politicians, and particularly Republicans like Morrisey and McCuskey, would have railed against the idea of running to the courtroom to litigate any perceived minor injustice. Ah, well, nevertheless. Instead, we had Morrisey not only refusing to rule out the possibility of seeking an injunction if the NCAA doesn't cooperate immediately with McCuskey's investigation but also suggesting the West Virginia snub might have been retribution for the state suing the NCAA in 2023 over basketball player's RaeQuan Battle's eligibility. 'A lot of people said, 'What are you doing?'' Morrisey said. 'We sent multiple letters they didn't respond adequately to and we fundamentally helped change the transfer eligibility rules. So I think the answer is when you're talking about multi-billion dollar businesses and universities that have a big stake in the outcome, absolutely (it's worthwhile).' Of course, one big difference: In the Battle lawsuit, West Virginia was challenging whether the NCAA's transfer rules violated antitrust laws on behalf of a citizen fighting for his rights. But this? This is just a whole lot of whining on behalf of a basketball team that lost 13 of its 32 games including to Colorado in the Big 12 tournament. And it's not even really clear what they hope to gain, other than a mention of 'objective criteria' for the NCAA tournament selection process. Which, if you have followed the selection process for any length of time, is like trying to explain why 'Anora' won Best Picture over 'Conclave.' There is no objective criteria. That's the point. And West Virginia, like every other Div. 1 school, not only knew that going in but agreed to it. Now, does that mean the committee got it right? No. West Virginia's exclusion was stunning, given that every 'bracketologist' who does this either as a job or a hobby had the Mountaineers in the field. And as we addressed Sunday night, the fact that North Carolina athletics director Bubba Cunningham chairs the selection committee isn't a great look when the final decision was literally UNC over West Virginia. In cases like this, the recusal procedures to ensure Cunningham wasn't part of the discussion or votes involving UNC don't protect the NCAA from accusations of favoritism. That gave Morrisey the opening to pounce, and if it wasn't him, it could just as easily have been the governor of Texas if the Longhorns got left out instead of the Mountaineers. 'UNC had representation in the room,' Morrisey said. 'It's being reported by a number of outlets that Cunningham had a significant bonus incentive, at least $70,000, to get into the tournament, arguably more if they advanced. I want folks to let that sink in for just a minute." Even if Cunningham did everything by the book, the selection process has long been plagued by suspicions that committee members will do their best to take care of buddies who work at other schools. And even if Cunningham never even hinted at lobbying for the Tar Heels, these committee members are colleagues and often friends who spend a lot of time with each other inside and outside the committee room during this process. So something like what happened Sunday only turbocharges conspiracy theories, and it's worth looking at whether athletics directors and conference commissioners should be the ones making these tough calls when there's so much on the line financially. But that's a matter for the leaders of college sports to reckon with — not elected officials who love to use this stuff to make it seem like they're fighting for the common man or woman when we all know it's political theater. McCuskey, the attorney general, even sounded more like a message board poster than a chief law enforcement officer in repeatedly referring to the Mountaineers as 'we' and making the case that a basketball team with guard Javon Small would have a chance to beat anyone in the country. In the end, it was deeply embarrassing for the people of West Virginia. Just like it was when some Florida politicians did the same thing after Florida State got left out of the 2023 College Football Playoff. And just like the group of legislators in Georgia, Alabama and Illinois that have recently tried to pass bills giving college athletes an exemption from state income tax on their NIL deals. In fact, it's probably not a stretch to say that no group of people has consistently done more to turn public opinion back toward the NCAA on a variety of issues than state-level legislators doing ridiculous things on behalf of college sports because they think it will win them more votes in the next election. Similar to most of those efforts, Monday's news conference was almost as funny as a variety show. Only it happened in real life, in the state of West Virginia, instead of on the SNL set where it belonged.

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