Between
Attacks on Electric Cars, Trump Says They’re ‘Incredible’
The former
president’s comments on E.V.s have shifted since he has grown more friendly
with Elon Musk, the billionaire Tesla founder.
Lisa
Friedman
By Lisa
Friedman
July 23,
2024, 1:24 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/23/climate/trump-electric-vehicles-musk.html
Former
President Donald J. Trump has spent years ridiculing electric vehicles, saying
they don’t go far, are too expensive and are made in China. He has promised to
end federal support for electric vehicles, a central feature of President
Biden’s strategy to cut the carbon dioxide that is heating the planet.
But in
recent months, Mr. Trump has been saying some nice things about E.V.s. While he
still throws some shade on electric vehicles, in the same breath he also tells
crowds that he likes them.
On Saturday,
he went further, telling a rally in Grand Rapids, Mich., “I’m constantly
talking about electric vehicles but I don’t mean I’m against them. I’m totally
for them.” Moments later he said, “I’ve driven them and they are incredible,
but they’re not for everybody.”
This subtle
softening began after Mr. Trump met in March with Elon Musk, the billionaire
founder of Tesla, in Palm Beach, Fla. The two men began frequent discussions on
a range of topics, including conversations about electric vehicles, according
to comments Mr. Musk made last month at a shareholders meeting. “He just called
me out of the blue,” Mr. Musk said. “I don’t know why, but he does.”
As spring
turned to summer, Mr. Trump shifted his attacks from the reliability and value
of electric vehicles to the federal incentives for consumers to buy E.V.s, and
to environmental regulations designed to prod automakers to step up production.
He’s said that anyone who wants to buy an electric vehicle should be able to
but the government should not shape the car market.
Asked at the
Tesla shareholders meeting in June about Mr. Trump’s apparent turn, Mr. Musk
replied, “I can be persuasive,” according to an audio recording.
“A lot of
his friends now have Teslas and they all love it,” Mr. Musk said. “And he’s a
huge fan of the Cybertruck. So I think those may be contributing factors.”
In fact, The
Washington Post reported in 2015 that Mr. Trump’s fleet of personal vehicles
included a Tesla. And as president, Mr. Trump once held an event at the White
House to promote an electric pickup truck made by Lordstown Motors, which later
went bankrupt. But after he lost the 2020 election and President Biden began a
concerted push for electric vehicles, Mr. Trump began attacking them.
Neither Mr.
Trump nor Mr. Musk responded to a request for comment.
Both men
stand to benefit from their new alliance.
For Mr.
Trump, the enthusiastic backing of Mr. Musk, one of the world’s wealthiest men
and a near mythical figure among Republicans, would be helpful. “The one thing
connected to E.V.s that Republicans like, is they like Elon,” said Mike Murphy,
a veteran Republican consultant who promotes electric vehicles.
“Elon Musk,
I love Elon Musk,” Mr. Trump told the crowd on Saturday. “Do we love him? I
love him.”
For Mr.
Musk, the elimination of the $7,500 federal tax credit for buyers of electric
vehicles could hurt GM, Ford and other Tesla competitors. The 2022 Inflation
Reduction Act provides tax credits of up to $7,500 for buyers of electric
vehicles, but some Tesla models do not qualify because of several requirements,
including that the vehicles be free of Chinese-made components.
“Take away
the subsidies,” Mr. Musk wrote on X this month. “It will only help Tesla.”
Tesla, which
has had an enormous head start in production and already has a network of
charging stations may be more likely to remain profitable without subsidies
than legacy automakers like GM or Ford, analysts have said.
Mr. Musk was
once a sharp critic of Mr. Trump, resigning from two advisory councils during
Mr. Trump’s presidency over his decision to pull the United States out of the
Paris climate agreement. But within a half-hour of the July 13 assassination
attempt against Mr. Trump, Mr. Musk endorsed his campaign to return to the
White House.
“Elon
endorsed me the other day,” Mr. Trump said at the Saturday rally, adding that
Mr. Musk has pledged to donate $45 million a month to his campaign. “Not $45
million — $45 million a month!”
Despite the
Biden administration’s support for electric vehicles, Mr. Musk has felt
slighted since 2021, when Tesla was not invited to a White House meeting on
E.V.s. He has bristled at the administration’s support for Detroit’s unionized
automakers, taking offense when Mr. Biden posted a video on X in January 2022
in which he was speaking with Mary Barra, the chairwoman and chief executive of
General Motors. “I meant it when I said the future was going to be made right
here in America,” Mr. Biden wrote. “Companies like GM and Ford are building
more electric vehicles here at home than ever before.”
Four months
later, Mr. Musk was still stewing. “This administration has done everything it
can to sideline & ignore Tesla, even though we have made twice as many
E.V.s as rest of U.S. industry combined,” Mr. Musk wrote.
The future
of electric vehicles and the course of the clean energy transition in America
could be altered by the 2024 election. Mr. Trump, who has dismissed climate
change as a hoax, wants to expand oil and gas drilling. Mr. Biden and Vice
President Kamala Harris consider climate change an urgent threat and want to
move the country away from fossil fuels and toward clean energy.
In response
to the Biden administration’s policies, American automakers have invested
billions to create the capacity to produce electric vehicles, which made up 6.8
percent of new vehicle sales in the United States in May, according to Edmunds,
a company that reviews cars and tracks the auto market. In the global market,
American automakers are facing stiff competition from BYD, China’s leading auto
company, which has been heavily subsidized by the Chinese government and churns
out inexpensive cars that have flooded China and are beginning to sell in
Europe.
“Any auto
C.E.O. will tell you electric vehicles are going to save the automobile
industry so the Chinese don’t dominate it,” Mr. Murphy said. “But in Trump’s
mind, he identifies investments in electric vehicles with Biden policy, so it’s
wrong and has to be attacked.”
There is a
clear partisan split in public opinion when it comes to electric vehicles. In a
Pew Research Center survey in June, 77 percent of Republicans said they would
not consider purchasing an electric vehicle for their next car and only 13
percent reported being “very interested” in an E.V. That’s compared with 45
percent of Democrats who said they would be “very interested” in making their
next car an electric one.
“Trump is
tapping into something Republicans really believe,” said Whit Ayres, a
Republican political consultant. “They’re far less likely to consider buying an
electric vehicle and they really resent the idea that the government is going
to come along and subsidize these Democrats who want to buy an electric
vehicle.”
He repeated
a familiar promise to end the “electric vehicle mandate on Day 1,” a phrase he
uses to refer to Biden administration limits on automobile tailpipe emissions.
It is designed to ensure that the majority, not 100 percent, of new passenger
cars and light trucks sold in the U.S. are all-electric or hybrids by 2032. It
does not ban the sales of gasoline-powered cars and trucks.
As the
Inflation Reduction Act was making its way through Congress in 2021, Mr. Musk
argued that it should be abandoned. He said government spending levels were
“insane.”
“We don’t
need the $7,500 tax credit,” Mr. Musk said at a Wall Street Journal conference.
“I would say, honestly, I would say I would just can this whole bill. Don’t
pass it.” He also dismissed federal money to build electric vehicle charging
stations, saying “Do we need to support the gas stations? We don’t.”
Tesla has
benefited greatly from government money in the past. The company received a
$465 million loan guarantee from the Department of Energy that allowed it to
produce specially designed, all-electric plug-in vehicles and build a facility
in California to make battery packs, electric motors and other components. It
repaid the loan in 2013.
Mr. Musk
seems unbothered by Mr. Trump’s declaration that he would end policies designed
to get more people to buy electric vehicles. “It’ll be fine,” Mr. Musk wrote on
his social media platform, X.
But Mr.
Trump and his allies have promoted other policies that could hurt Tesla.
For example,
Project 2025, a blueprint for a next Republican administration written by more
than 100 of Mr. Trump’s former aides, calls for revoking California’s ability
to set its own emissions standards. That ability, under a waiver of the Clean
Air Act, has underpinned California’s goal of selling only zero-emissions
vehicles by 2035, making Tesla a major player in that market.
Conservatives
said they believed that Mr. Musk had little to worry about from a second Trump
administration.
“I just
don’t see the downside risk from a business perspective for Musk,” said James
Pethokoukis, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a
right-leaning research organization in Washington.
“Does it
seem likely that actions by the Trump administration will undercut the only
American company that’s successful at manufacturing these cars, employs about
150,00 people and is based in Texas, and, oh yeah, whose owner is now a massive
donor to the Republican Party and supports President Trump?” Mr. Pethokoukis
asked.
Lisa
Friedman is a Times reporter who writes about how governments are addressing
climate change and the effects of those policies on communities. More about
Lisa Friedman
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