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Battle for the White House lands in car country

Your guide to the political forces shaping the energy transformation
Sep 27, 2023 View in browser
 

By Arianna Skibell

Former President Donald Trump will hold a rally in Michigan instead of debating other Republican candidates on Wednesday. | Artie Walker Jr./AP Photo

Former President Donald Trump plans to skip tonight’s Republican primary debate (again). He will instead head to Michigan, where, as Scott Waldman writes, a union strike is quickly becoming a frontline in the 2024 battle for the White House — or at least a major talking point for candidates.

A quick recap: The United Auto Workers is approaching week three in its strike against Ford, General Motor and Stellantis. Workers are demanding higher wages to compensate for years of employee concessions to management, amid a shift to Electric vehicles that threatens to erode UAW jobs.

Political battle lines: President Joe Biden, a self-described “union guy,” made a historic trip to the front of the picket line yesterday to support workers. He has pledged to fight climate change by boosting electric vehicles and the U.S. workers who make them.

While the climate law’s $370 billion investment in clean energy is fueling a record number of proposed manufacturing and battery facilities, much of that spending is happening in Southern states where a lack of unions likely means lower wages. Plus, the average electric car has fewer parts than the gasoline-powered version and therefore requires fewer workers to assemble.

For Republican politicians, the answer is clear: Scrap Biden’s electric vehicle agenda altogether.

Most of the GOP presidential candidates have framed Biden’s climate agenda as a recipe for enriching China, which has a bustling EV market and dominates the global supply chain for batteries. Trump claimed that under Biden’s plan, all U.S. electric cars will be made in China. (Fact check: The vast majority of EVs sold in the U.S. are made by American companies, namely Tesla.)

Trump called on rank-and-file autoworkers to pressure their leaders into endorsing him instead of Biden to save their jobs. Trump narrowly won Michigan in 2016, a feat he hopes to replicate.

How do auto workers actually feel? 
“Nobody’s happy with Trump, nobody’s happy with Biden,” UAW member Aaron Westaway told David Ferris, Hannah Northey and Mike Lee. “We’ve got a lot of people that are frustrated, just with all of them.”

POLITICO’s E&E News reporters visited the picket lines at Big Three auto plants in three states and interviewed almost two dozen workers. Many of the workers interviewed voiced appreciation for Biden’s visit and endorsement of their demands. But they were concerned his EV push will lead to major job losses.

Electric cars “don’t need spark plugs, what else, oil filters — we sell a lot of those,” said Whitney Walch, a Stellantis distribution center employee. “If we don’t have all those parts, I feel like we don’t have a lot to do.”

UAW President Shuan Fain said if there is going to be a transition to electric vehicles it has to be a “just” one.

 

It's Wednesday — thank you for tuning in to POLITICO's Power Switch. I'm your host, Arianna Skibell. Power Switch is brought to you by the journalists behind E&E News and POLITICO Energy.

Send your tips, comments, questions to [email protected]. And folks, let’s keep it classy.

 

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Listen to today’s POLITICO Energy podcast

Today in POLITICO Energy’s podcast: James Bikales breaks down how Ford's paused $3.5 billion electric vehicle factory in Michigan is caught between the United Auto Workers’ ongoing strike, President Joe Biden’s historic visit to the picket lines, and the GOP’s anti-China rhetoric.

Power Centers

In many countries, far-right parties are shifting to denouncing climate policies they see as expensive and harmful to the average voter. | Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

European voters turns away from climate
The rise of far-right parties in Europe is pushing many national leaders to hit the brakes on ambitious policies to curb climate change as they try to thread the needle of addressing the emergency while not losing votes, write Giorgio Leali and Louise Guillot.

French President Emmanuel Macron is the latest leader to attempt to frame climate change policies in a voter-friendly way by laying out an environmental transition policy that throws a lot of cash at the problem while downplaying penalties.

Ford move emboldens Hill critics
Ford's decision to halt construction of a $3.5 billion electric vehicle battery plant in Michigan is empowering critics of the project who object to the auto company's use of Chinese battery technology, writes Hannah Northey.

That includes Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, who praised Ford's decision. Meanwhile, supporters of the project are downplaying the severity of the pause.

In Other News

The youth are fed up: Six young climate activists take European governments to court over climate change.

Un-beet-able produce: Meet the climate-defying fruits and vegetables in your future.

 

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Sen. Bob Menendez speaks during a press conference on Monday in Union City, N.J. | Andres Kudacki/AP Photo

Charges against New Jersey Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez could derail Congress' long-stalled attempt to overhaul the money-losing federal flood insurance program.

Three top Republicans are threatening Ford with a congressional subpoena if the automaker does not produce documents regarding its partnership to license Chinese battery technology.

The U.S. will not be able to ramp up clean hydrogen production without thousands of workers trained in engineering, metal work, legal work and business operations.

That's it for today, folks! Thanks for reading.

 

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This post first appeared on Test Sandbox Updates, please read the originial post: here

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