Sen. Joe Manchin Says EV Tax Credit Bonus Is Gone From Spending Bill

Manchin
Sen. Joe Manchin. (Scott Applewhite/Associated Press)

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Senate Democrats have scrapped a $4,500 bonus tax credit for electric vehicles made with domestic union labor that was opposed by Sen. Joe Manchin as they seek to wrap up negotiations on a spending deal.

“It’s gone,” Manchin said in an interview at the Capitol on June 21.

The Build Back Better legislation passed last year in the House would have increased the $7,500 consumer tax credit to as much as $12,500, as part of a White House-backed effort to ensure that electric vehicles are “manufactured by workers with good jobs.”



But the plan came under fire from Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat and swing vote in the evenly split Senate, as well as from nonunionized EV-maker Tesla Inc. and foreign-owned automakers such as Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co.

“At this point, what we are left with is the base credit,” said Joe Britton, head of the Zero Emission Transportation Association. Conversations about lifting an existing 200,000-vehicle-per-manufacturer cap on the credit remain ongoing, Britton said. The Washington-based trade group represents EV makers such as Tesla Inc. and Rivian Automotive Inc.

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In recent months, Manchin criticized the EV tax credit as “ludicrous,” complaining that it would subsidize a product for which there was a waiting list and that hydrogen vehicles should be incentivized instead. He has been seeking stricter limits on the cost of eligible vehicles and for stricter limits on the income of those allowed to take advantage of the credit.

The credit’s size and scope remain a point of debate in negotiations over the spending bill, according to a person familiar with the matter. In recent weeks, Manchin has said he doesn’t like the existing EV tax credit structure because U.S. companies have run out of credits or will soon run out of credits, and foreign companies will continue to get subsidized.

“Any foreign vehicle that is an electric vehicle is going to be able to claim a $7,500 credit” under existing law, Manchin said. “I don’t think that’s our intent.”

--With assistance from Steven T. Dennis.