The Biden Administration’s latest mission is to promote electric vehicles, but are they worth the hefty price tag? Senator John Kennedy asked the hard question during a senate hearing on the Inflation Reduction Act, he called out the government for trying to force their agenda on their agenda on the people, arguing it a waste of taxpayer money.
During a Senate Committee on the Budget hearing, Louisiana Republican Senator John Kennedy questioned the need for government incentives to encourage Americans to buy electric cars. President and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association, Abigail Ross Hopper, was testifying on the importance of clean energy investments and the Inflation Reduction Act.
The Senate Committee on the Budget hearing provided a platform for Senator Kennedy to question the need for government incentives for electric vehicles. He asked Ms. Hopper why Americans are not choosing electric cars over traditional combustion engine cars in a competitive market. He challenged the need for government incentives, arguing that if electric cars were so great, Americans would already be buying them.
The conversation between Senator Kennedy and Ms. Hopper highlighted the Biden Administration’s $7,500 consumer tax credit for electric cars, part of the Inflation Reduction Act. The act also includes a new battery-sourcing rule that will be stricter than previous rules. This tax credit applies to only eight electric vehicles and two plug-in hybrids. Experts estimate that the program will cost $136 billion over the next 10 years.
While the tax credit is intended to incentivize the purchase of electric vehicles, some argue that it may disproportionately benefit higher-income Americans who can afford the upfront cost of an electric car. In contrast, lower-income Americans may not be able to take advantage of the tax credit and are left to bear the burden of rising fuel costs. Additionally, critics argue that the government should not be in the business of picking winners and losers in the auto industry and that the market should be allowed to determine the best technology.
The exchange between Senator Kennedy and Ms. Hopper highlights the ongoing debate surrounding the government’s role in promoting clean energy and electric vehicles. While incentives such as the tax credit may be necessary to promote clean energy, some question whether the government should be involved in the market at all.
The exchange between Senator John Kennedy and Abigail Ross Hopper sheds light on the Biden Administration’s push for clean energy and the role of the government in promoting electric vehicles. While some argue that government incentives are necessary to encourage the adoption of clean energy technology, others question the role of the government in attempting to manufacture a not yet popular market. What the government does not realize is that when something is forced people resist.
Let’s continue this conversation, in the comments below.
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Perhaps the idiots in the Biden regime should look at the entire process of manufacturing and then running an electric vehicle(EV). Mining the minerals for the batteries requires massive mining equipment that must use petroleum products. The earth is tilled up in great swaths in order to get to lithium and cobalt. In some countries child labor is involved in the mining process. The car itself requires energy (electricity) to manufacture the parts. This process is not in the least 'green'. It is a fantasy. And then once an EV is bought one has to worry if the batteries will explode unexpectedly, where the closest charging stations are, will the car run in cold temps or will the car explode in high temps. And once the batteries die and you're sitting in the car, good luck getting out. The batteries are expensive and become hazardous waste once they can no longer be recharged. The EPA recommends that you do NOT remove the batteries yourself, but to take it to an authorized dealer, because it could literally kill you. And the electricity to charge the car has to come from coal or oil. Idiots.