Houston Chronicle

Biden says infrastruc­ture bill will boost electric cars

- By Justin Sink

President Joe Biden said the $550 billion infrastruc­ture bill he signed will help propel sales of American-made electric vehicles like the battery-powered Hummers manufactur­ed at the General Motors Co. plant in Detroit he visited Wednesday.

Biden said the legislatio­n, along with his Build Back Better proposal, would kick-start sales of vehicle batteries, parts and other materials. “We’re going to make sure the jobs of the future end up here in Michigan, not halfway around the world,” Biden said at the plant.

The bill includes not just $7.5 billion to build about 400,000 new electric charging stations, but billions more for roads, rail, and ports. The stakes are immense: White House officials are counting on the legislatio­n to turn around perception­s that both the nation’s economic standing and Biden’s presidency are faltering.

Some seven in 10 Americans say the economy is in bad shape, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll released last weekend. Fifty-five percent say they disapprove of Biden’s economic performanc­e, while his overall approval rating has plunged to 41 percent.

White House officials have acknowledg­ed the political toll that inflation is taking on the president’s political prospects. Thanks to post-pandemic supply chain bottleneck­s and ravenous consumer demand, prices are rising at the fastest rate in three decades. A report released last week from the Bureau of Labor Statistics said costs for energy and medical care were among factors pushing consumer prices up 6.2 percent last month, compared to the prior year.

Biden’s team maintains that months of congressio­nal infighting over his signature legislativ­e proposals — including a $1.75 billion social spending package still under negotiatio­n — has made it difficult to promote their accomplish­ments.

“This law builds back our bridges, our water systems, our power lines, our electric grid better and stronger,” Biden said at the GM plant.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Monday that promoting the new law provides Biden the opportunit­y to “be out in the country, connecting the agenda, the impacts on people’s lives, moving beyond the legislativ­e process to talk about how this is going to help them.”

Biden has adopted a more sympatheti­c tone as he looks to win back suburban and female voters who helped propel him to the White House. At the bill signing, the president told Americans weary from the pandemic that “we hear you and we see you.”

Biden opened his speech on Wednesday by pointing out a spate of promising economic news, from retailer assurances that shelves would be stocked for the holidays to upward revisions in recent job reports. The effort to promote more positive data underscore­d the White House’s eagerness to improve a narrative that has hung heavy over the administra­tion.

Road trips

Other administra­tion officials are expected to hit the road in the coming days to promote the infrastruc­ture program. And the White House is trying to organize its daily messaging around touting the bill that’s been signed — not the particular­s of the battle over the second leg of the president’s domestic agenda, a package of tax changes and climate and social spending called Build Back Better.

That means seeking backdrops like the one provided by the GM factory. The plant will provide new union jobs in a crucial swing state that flipped from former President Donald Trump’s column in 2016 to Biden in last year’s election. GM says the factory will eventually employ as many as 2,200 people.

GM Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra threatened to close it in 2018 as part of a restructur­ing, but instead repurposed it as part of the company’s push into electric vehicles.

The new line of Hummers are battery-powered — the first of what the automaker promises to be a broad array of electric trucks and SUVs to be built at the $2.2 billion facility known as “Factory Zero.”

Biden took a prototype electric Hummer for a test drive after touring the plant, once again indulged his love for fast cars,

“I’m an automobile guy. We used to have the second-largest GM plant in America in Detroit,” he told a worker at the plant after asking the woman to call him “Joe.”

Another worker told the president that the company’s new Hummer is “three times the weight of your Corvette and twice as fast.”

“Isn’t that incredible?” Biden responded.

In the plant’s expansive parking lot, Biden got into a prototype and gunned it twice, burning a little rubber the second time, before tearing off across the asphalt.

Biden’s visit offered him an opportunit­y to burnish his green credential­s and celebrate the publicpriv­ate partnershi­ps he says are key to combating climate change.

GM announced in October plans to install up to 40,000 vehicle chargers across the U.S. and Canada, with a focus on underserve­d areas where charging access is limited. Barra has committed to spending almost $750 million to expand charging infrastruc­ture and to spend $35 billion to make 30 new electric vehicles over the next four years.

She intends to offer a carbonfree lineup of cars by 2035. GM has a target of doubling revenue by the end of the decade by selling new electric models alongside its gasoline burners, as well as starting its self-driving robotaxi business and selling software-based services in the car.

Chip shortage

The trip to the GM facility risks underscori­ng some of the headwinds facing Biden’s presidency.

His proposal to allow U.S. carmakers with union workforces to offer bigger tax credits for EV purchases than nonunion rivals has stirred controvers­y, as it would benefit companies like GM and Ford over Tesla Inc. and foreign manufactur­ers.

And automakers have been badly hurt by a microchip shortage after the coronaviru­s ravaged the workforces of major Asian chipmakers.

As a consequenc­e, manufactur­ing delays have escalated prices for both new and used automobile­s, and left many dealers with empty lots as they wait for production to increase.

AlixPartne­rs estimated that automakers globally will build 7.7 million fewer cars in 2021 than they would have without supply chain shortages — up from 3.9 million fewer in a May forecast.

 ?? Nic Antaya / Tribune News Service ?? President Joe Biden speaks at the General Motors Factory ZERO electric vehicle assembly plant on Wednesday in Detroit. Biden touted the benefits of the infrastruc­ture bill he recently signed.
Nic Antaya / Tribune News Service President Joe Biden speaks at the General Motors Factory ZERO electric vehicle assembly plant on Wednesday in Detroit. Biden touted the benefits of the infrastruc­ture bill he recently signed.

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