Key Takeaways
- US EV tax credits ended, charging infrastructure funding frozen, and fuel-efficiency targets eliminated
- Major automakers scaling back EV production with billions in losses
- China accelerates EV dominance while US retreats from the market
- Experts warn of national security risks in ceding EV technology to China
The United States is retreating from electric vehicle development just as China accelerates its dominance, creating what experts call a massive strategic mistake that benefits America’s top trade rival.
Since returning to office, the Trump administration and congressional Republicans have eliminated the $7,500 EV tax credit, frozen charging infrastructure funding, and removed fuel-efficiency targets for automakers. This policy shift comes as China solidifies its control over global EV sales, battery production, and rare-earth mineral supply chains.
The China Contradiction
While Trump’s anti-EV stance aligns with Republican opposition to policies seen as threatening the oil and gas industry, it contradicts his broader trade war with China. The administration has aggressively pushed for American manufacturing in semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, and even forced TikTok’s US assets to be sold to American investors over security concerns.
Yet on electric vehicles – widely seen as the future of transportation – the US is stepping back while China charges ahead.
“The writing is on the wall for gasoline, and to cede EV technology to China is a massive mistake,” said Huibert Mees, a retired automotive engineer who worked for Tesla, Lucid and Apple. “I think it’s a massive national security risk, because it is the future of transportation.”
Automakers Pull Back
American car companies are responding to the policy changes with significant production cuts and financial losses:
- General Motors expects a $1.6 billion loss from EV production pullbacks
- Ford’s EV division lost over $2 billion in the first half of this year
- Stellantis (Jeep, Ram, Chrysler, Dodge) scaled back US EV ambitions
- Honda ended US production of the Acura ZDX electric crossover
- Tesla is focusing more on AI and robotics than cars
The situation is compounded by Trump’s 25% tariffs on imported cars and parts, which automakers have been absorbing to avoid consumer price increases.
Industry Uncertainty Grows
Erin Keating, executive analyst at Cox Automotive, explained the broader impact: “On some level, some of this pulling back, from an automaker perspective, is because there’s just so much uncertainty.” She noted the EV sector has become “an obvious place for automakers to dial back production and try to save some costs while they figure out everything else.”
Meanwhile, Chinese EV makers like BYD and Geely are expanding aggressively into international markets from East Asia to Europe and South America with affordable, increasingly sophisticated vehicles.
“It wasn’t that long ago that Chinese cars would just would basically obliterate themselves in a crash test,” said Mees. “Now they’re leading, and it hasn’t taken that long — they’re going at breakneck speed, and they’re not slowing down.”



