Los Angeles Times

Judge rejects Trump rule on drug pricing

Puerto Rico, 22 states back California, vow to keep tougher rules.

- associated press

A federal jurist says the administra­tion lacks the power to require prices to be put in TV ads.

Citing climate-damaging tailpipe emissions, 23 U.S. governors signed a pledge Tuesday backing California leaders in their showdown with the Trump administra­tion over its plans to relax vehicle mileage standards.

The pledge by leaders of states and Puerto Rico, most of them Democrats, comes as the administra­tion moves to block tougher mileage standards laid out by then-President Obama as part of his efforts against climate change. Legal challenges to Trump’s policy proposal threaten to disrupt the auto industry for years, and an influentia­l auto industry trade group is renewing its appeal for a compromise.

The Trump administra­tion says American consumers increasing­ly want bigger, less-efficient SUVs and pickup trucks. It also argues that demanding ever more fuel-efficient vehicles will drive up automobile costs and keep less-safe, older vehicles on the road longer; opponents challenge that claim.

The administra­tion is expected to release its final rules on the mileage changes by early fall.

California and other states have promised litigation to block them.

The pledge commits to sticking broadly to the preTrump mileage goals, a program that annually tightens mileage standards to reduce climate-changing carbon emissions.

Transporta­tion and the power sector are the biggest sources of heat-trapping fossil fuel pollution in the United States.

Environmen­tal Protection Agency spokesman Michael Abboud said the administra­tion was “pursuing one national standard to provide safe, affordable vehicles for consumers while also improving environmen­tal outcomes.”

At stake is California’s ability to set its own emissions and fuel economy standards, a power granted by Congress in the Clean Air Act to fight the state’s smog problems in the 1970s.

California once had more stringent standards than federal ones, but the two sides voluntaril­y synced their standards under Obama.

The Trump administra­tion has threatened to challenge California’s authority to set its own mileage standards, which are followed by about a dozen states.

The pledge says governors “will not compromise on our responsibi­lity to protect the health of our communitie­s, our climate, and the savings consumers stand to gain at the pump.” It promises “additional concrete actions to fulfill this duty and defend against any threats.”

Besides California and Puerto Rico, the pledge was signed by the leaders of Colorado, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin.

The commitment from the states — representi­ng a sizable share of the U.S. car market — hints at years of legal challenges and regulatory uncertaint­y for automakers if the Trump administra­tion moves ahead on the mileage freeze.

Democratic Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware urged automakers to get behind the states in the interests of cutting carbon emissions and advancing cleanerbur­ning vehicles.

“Since the Trump administra­tion seems determined to put all environmen­tal progress into reverse, automakers should make clear that they will not support this rollback by working directly with California and these 23 states to drive automobile technology into the future,” Carper said in a statement.

But an auto industry group made clear it had worries about both sides’ positions in the dispute.

“It is untenable to face a marketplac­e with different standards in different states, but it [is] also untenable to face standards that rise so high that only a handful of electric vehicles can achieve them,” said Gloria Bergquist, spokeswoma­n for the Washington-based Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers. “That is why automakers keep urging the federal government and states to find a middle ground that raises standards year over year while aligning with market demand.”

President Trump has pushed automakers to support him in his bid to relax mileage standards. Last month, major automakers instead appealed for the administra­tion to return to talks with California.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom indicated he wasn’t optimistic about any breakthrou­ghs with the administra­tion.

“I don’t sense they’re sincere in their commitment to sit down and negotiate,” he said, and cited the administra­tion’s overall backing for the country’s oil and gas industry.

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? TRAFFIC ON the 5 in Sun Valley. The Trump administra­tion is moving to block tougher Obama-era automobile mileage standards to combat climate change.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times TRAFFIC ON the 5 in Sun Valley. The Trump administra­tion is moving to block tougher Obama-era automobile mileage standards to combat climate change.

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