EVs charging

Leahy and Brewer Discuss Gov. Bill Lee’s Absence from GOP Governors Letter Demanding Biden Drop EV Mandates

Jan 24, 2024

All-star panelist Clint Brewer joined Tuesday’s edition of The Tennessee Star Report with Michael Patrick Leahy where he discussed the reasoning behind Tennessee Governor Bill Lee’s exclusion from a letter sent by Republican governors to President Joe Biden in regards to his administration’s electric vehicle (EVs) mandates.

On Monday, the Republican Governors Association – which Lee chairs – announced 16 Republican governors sent a letter to  Biden urging him to “change course” on his “overreaching mandate” that says two out of every three vehicles must be battery-electric by 2032.

The governors requested the Biden administration instead provide a “more realistic approach by allowing the free market to determine the direction and timing for the industry’s growth rather than the federal government.”

The governors of Arkansas, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming signed the letter.

Brewer argued Lee’s exclusion from the letter stems from the Volunteer State being home to major automobile manufacturers.

“Tennessee’s economy is very, very wrapped up in the automotive industry,” Brewer explained. “You’ve got three major OEM auto manufacturers here… In addition to that, you’ve got over 900 auto supply companies that do business here. One of them is actually a Japanese company that, from a job standpoint, might be as large as the three OEMs. And, you know, the state’s heavily invested in being the new Detroit and it has been since the 1980s.”

Brewer added that Lee’s decision not to sign the letter was grounded in not jeopardizing the state’s “economic future from that of the automotive industry.”

“Tennessee, with three OEMs online and a fourth on the way, is now and has been heavily invested in the automotive manufacturing sector for the better part of the last, what would it be now, 40 years? So economically, there’s no way to, you know, uncouple, decouple the state’s economic future from that of the automotive industry,” Brewer said. “And so, you know, whether you like it or not, almost every automotive manufacturer out there that I know of, has chosen to place their bets on electric vehicles.”

Despite Leahy pointing out that his defense of Lee was a “corporatist argument,” Brewer continued by saying Lee’s decision was him “siding with people who make their money working for the automotive sector.”

“It’s Tennesseans’ jobs. I mean, it’s hundreds of thousands of people that are employed by the sector in the state. He’s siding with Tennesseans. I mean, he’s siding with people who make their money working for the automotive sector,” Brewer said.

Leahy countered Brewer’s argument in regards to Lee standing up for the jobs of Tennesseans, saying, “He’s not…Because they are losing money on electric vehicles because people don’t want them. And so, they’re being forced to invest – and in this case, our taxpayer dollars – but they’re forced to invest their money into products that nobody wants or that are far below the demand, far below what the government wants it to be.”

Brewer went on to admit that while Lee “could be part of a very positive dialogue about electric vehicles in this country,” current models “cost too much for the American family,” and the “charging infrastructure is not there.”

“Let’s be honest – I mean, right now, the problem is…they cost too much for the American family. The models that are made right now don’t accommodate the American family,” Brewer said.

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Kaitlin Housler is a reporter at The Tennessee Star and The Star News Network. Follow Kaitlin on X / Twitter.
Photo “Electric Vehicles Charging” by Mariordo. CC BY-SA 4.0.

 

 

 

 

Roger Simon on Pro-Hamas, Anti-Israel Protests on College Campuses: ‘What Happened in Germany in 1937’ Is ‘What We’re Undergoing Now’

Roger Simon on Pro-Hamas, Anti-Israel Protests on College Campuses: ‘What Happened in Germany in 1937’ Is ‘What We’re Undergoing Now’

Roger Simon, the co-founder of PJMedia and current columnist for The Epoch Times, said the pro-Hamas protests unfolding on Ivy League college campuses across the nation are comparable to the scene in Germany in 1937.

Simon made the comments on Tuesday’s episode of The Michael Patrick Leahy Show after listening to audio of a clip taken from Columbia University where pro-Palestine protesters formed a human chain to keep Jewish students out of an encampment on the university’s campus.

NewsChannel 5’s Phil Williams Refuses to Explain His Failure to Get Justin Jones on the Record about Allegations He Covered Up Report of 2020 Sexual Assault, Tries to Distract with False Claims About Tennessee Star Reporter

NewsChannel 5’s Phil Williams Refuses to Explain His Failure to Get Justin Jones on the Record about Allegations He Covered Up Report of 2020 Sexual Assault, Tries to Distract with False Claims About Tennessee Star Reporter

Tom Pappert, lead reporter at The Tennessee Star, addressed personal attacks from NewsChannel 5’s chief investigative reporter Phil Williams over the weekend, saying such attacks are “absolute silliness” and a common tactic used by Williams when pressed on his “journalistic failings.”

On Sunday, Pappert reported on an interview between Williams and Dan Mandis, host of Nashville’s Morning News with Dan Mandis on SuperTalk 99.7 WTN, where Williams said that he once asked Tennessee State Representative Justin Jones (D-Nashville) to respond to claims made by his former close colleague Jeneisha Harris on June 18, 2020 that the state lawmaker had covered up the sexual assault of two protesters by a homeless man.