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Trump Repeals California EV Mandate, Prompting State Lawsuit

California officials vow legal action over what they call an unlawful use of the Congressional Review Act

President Donald Trump speaks after signing a bill blocking California’s rule banning the sale of new gas-powered cars by 2035, in the East Room of the White House, on Thursday.

Overview

  • President Trump on June 12 signed three Congressional Review Act resolutions that revoke EPA waivers for California’s 2035 gas car phase-out, zero-emission truck mandate and low-NOx rules.
  • The reversals undo California’s plan, backed by 11 states covering nearly a third of the U.S. auto market, to require 80% of new vehicle sales be electric by 2035.
  • Major automakers including General Motors and Toyota lobbied for the repeal, arguing that a patchwork of state mandates drives up production costs and limits consumer choice.
  • Environmental advocates warn the rollback will increase emissions, worsen air quality and cede U.S. electric vehicle leadership to overseas competitors.
  • Hours after the signing, California’s governor and attorney general filed suit, arguing that the Congressional Review Act cannot lawfully rescind EPA waivers granted under the Clean Air Act.