"California and 10 States Sue Over Federal EV Rule Rollback: A Clash Over Clean Air, Federalism, and the Future of Transportation"
The legal battle over America's electric vehicle future has entered a new and consequential chapter. A coalition of 11 states, led by California, has filed suit against the federal government, challenging what state officials describe as an unprecedented use of the Congressional Review Act to dismantle California's long-standing authority to set its own vehicle emissions standards. This lawsuit is not merely another round in the familiar tug-of-war between state and federal environmental policy — it represents a fundamental test of how far Congress can reach into regulatory frameworks that have defined American clean air policy for nearly six decades.
At the heart of the dispute are three Congressional Review Act resolutions signed into law on June 12, 2025, which rescinded EPA waivers that had authorized California's Advanced Clean Cars II rule, its Advanced Clean Trucks regulation, and the Omnibus Low NOx standards for heavy-duty engines. The Advanced Clean Cars II rule in particular set escalating targets for zero-emission vehicle sales, starting at 35% for model year 2026 and ramping up to 100% by 2035. For California — a state that has grappled with the nation's worst air pollution for generations — these rules represented the culmination of a decades-long strategy to align public health, environmental stewardship, and technological innovation.
The coalition of plaintiff states — which includes New York, Massachusetts, Washington, Colorado, and others — argues that the CRA was never designed to nullify state regulations. In fact, both the Senate Parliamentarian and the Government Accountability Office had previously determined that EPA waiver authorizations are "adjudicatory orders" rather than agency "rules," and therefore fall outside the CRA's scope entirely. This is a genuinely novel legal question. The CRA, enacted in 1996, was intended to give Congress a fast-track mechanism to overturn recently issued federal agency regulations. It had never before been wielded against California's Clean Air Act waivers in the program's entire history. The states contend that Congress, in applying the CRA this way, acted ultra vires — beyond its statutory authority — setting up a separation-of-powers showdown that could reach the Supreme Court.
Beyond the legal intricacies, there is a broader story here about markets, planning, and global competitiveness. Automakers design vehicle platforms on five-to-seven-year product cycles. When the regulatory floor suddenly drops out, the uncertainty radiates through supply chains, factory retooling schedules, and strategic investment decisions. Ford, General Motors, Toyota, and others have collectively committed hundreds of billions of dollars to electrification — not just because of California's mandates, but because the global market is moving in that direction regardless. The real risk of this legal whiplash is not that it will stop the EV transition, but that it will make that transition slower, costlier, and less predictable for American manufacturers at precisely the moment when Chinese competitors like BYD are scaling with remarkable speed.
And the international context matters enormously. China's new energy vehicle sales surpassed 50% of the domestic market for the first time in mid-2024, and Chinese automakers are now aggressively exporting to Europe, Southeast Asia, and Latin America. The European Union, meanwhile, has locked in its own 2035 zero-emission target for new cars. When the world's two largest auto markets after the United States are marching decisively toward electrification, a fragmented American regulatory landscape doesn't just create legal headaches — it risks ceding technological leadership and supply chain dominance to global competitors who face no such ambiguity at home.
There is also an underappreciated public health dimension to this fight. California's special authority under the Clean Air Act was granted in 1967 specifically because the state's geography and population density made its air pollution uniquely severe. The Los Angeles basin and the San Joaquin Valley have struggled with smog for generations, and vehicle tailpipe emissions remain the single largest source of the pollutants that cause asthma, cardiovascular disease, and premature death. The American Lung Association has consistently ranked multiple California metropolitan areas among the worst in the nation for ozone and particulate pollution. Stripping away the regulatory tools that have driven measurable improvements in air quality over decades puts those hard-won gains at risk, particularly for the low-income communities and communities of color that disproportionately live near freeways and freight corridors.
The legal arguments on both sides are more nuanced than partisan headlines suggest. Supporters of the CRA resolutions point to the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, which gives the federal government exclusive authority over fuel economy standards and bars states from adopting any regulation "related to" fuel economy. They argue that California's zero-emission mandates are, in practical effect, fuel economy standards by another name — and that the Clean Air Act's waiver provision cannot override a separate federal statute with its own preemption clause. The U.S. Department of Justice, in a parallel lawsuit filed in March 2026 against the California Air Resources Board, pressed exactly this argument, seeking declaratory judgments and permanent injunctions against both the CO2 fleet standards and the ZEV sales mandate.
Yet the states' counterargument is equally compelling. If Congress can use the CRA to nullify state regulations that were authorized through a well-established EPA waiver process, what prevents future Congresses from using the same mechanism to override any state policy they dislike — from building codes to water quality standards — simply because a federal agency once reviewed and approved them? The procedural question of what constitutes an "agency rule" under the CRA has sweeping implications that extend far beyond electric vehicles. Legal scholars watching this case have noted that a broad reading of the CRA's scope could fundamentally reshape the balance of power between federal and state governments across multiple regulatory domains.
In the near term, the practical consequences are already materializing. Major truck manufacturers, including Daimler Truck North America, have filed their own lawsuits seeking to unwind voluntary clean truck partnership agreements with California. The EPA has simultaneously signaled its intent to reconsider the 2009 Endangerment Finding — the foundational scientific determination that greenhouse gases threaten public health and welfare, which underpins virtually all federal climate regulation of vehicles. Taken together, these actions represent not just a policy pivot but a systematic effort to dismantle the legal architecture of vehicle emissions regulation as it has existed for decades.
Yet even amid the legal turbulence, market forces continue to push toward electrification. Battery costs have fallen by roughly 90% over the past fifteen years. Charging infrastructure, while still inadequate in many regions, is expanding rapidly thanks to both public investment and private-sector deployment. Consumer awareness and acceptance of EVs continue to grow, particularly as more models become available across price points and vehicle segments. California itself has already seen EVs capture over 25% of new car sales — well ahead of the national average — demonstrating that even without mandates, consumer demand is real and accelerating.
The outcome of this litigation will reverberate far beyond California's borders. Fourteen other states have historically followed California's vehicle emissions standards under Section 177 of the Clean Air Act, collectively representing more than a third of the U.S. auto market. If the waiver rescissions stand, those states lose their ability to enforce standards stricter than the federal baseline. If the states prevail, it would affirm not only California's special role in clean air regulation but also place significant limits on the Congressional Review Act's reach — a precedent that would matter in contexts ranging from financial regulation to workplace safety.
What makes this moment particularly significant is that it arrives at the intersection of several larger currents: the maturation of EV technology, the intensification of U.S.-China economic competition, the growing urgency of climate adaptation, and a broader national debate about the proper balance between federal and state authority. None of these forces is going away, regardless of how any single lawsuit is resolved. The question is whether the United States can build a regulatory framework stable enough to guide long-term investment while remaining flexible enough to adapt as technology and markets evolve.
The 11-state coalition's lawsuit is ultimately about more than tailpipe emissions. It is about whether a single Congress, using a procedural mechanism originally designed for a much narrower purpose, can undo a regulatory partnership between states and the federal government that has produced cleaner air, spurred technological innovation, and saved lives for nearly sixty years. The courts will now have the opportunity — and the responsibility — to answer that question.
Source: TechInAsia — California, 10 states sue over federal EV rule rollbacks
Additional legal analysis: Jones Day — Active Battle Over the California Clean Air Act Waiver Continues
Comments
Interesting legal fight, but I wish the conversation went beyond tailpipes and battery plants. Even if California wins and the ZEV mandate holds at 100% by 2035, an electric F-150 stuck in the same traffic jam as a gas one is still stuck. The article mentions that EVs have already captured 25% of new car sales in California — great. But per capita VMT has been flat to declining in the state’s urban cores for years because people are moving back to neighborhoods where they can walk to a grocery store.
China isn’t just winning on EV manufacturing. They’re building 4,000 km of new metro lines. Paris banned through-traffic in the city center. Amsterdam is literally removing parking spots to make room for bike lanes. Meanwhile, the US is having a legal fight over whether states can set their own emissions standards, which is important, but it’s all upstream of the real problem: we designed our cities around cars, and swapping the fuel source doesn’t fix the land use.
The CRA question about federal vs. state authority is genuinely consequential. But if I could wave a wand, I’d trade a thousand ZEV mandates for one actual dedicated bus lane on Sepulveda. Induced demand works both ways — build more lanes, get more traffic. Build more trains, get more riders. The Clean Air Act fight matters, but the land use fight matters more.
Read this on lunch. Eighteen years in construction and this means projects get paused.
When EV charging depots started rolling in a couple years ago, we had real work. Concrete, trenching, pulling 480, mounting stations. Good union hours. Now every developer with a charger project is in wait-and-see mode.
I'm thinking about the guy on my crew who put a down payment on a house based on that overtime. When the regulatory rug gets pulled, he's the one who pays. Not the lawyers.
We'll see if this actually means boots on the ground. Right now it means boots on the sidelines while courts figure out whether Congress can rewire a system California installed sixty years ago. You can't pour a foundation on a lawsuit. ⛑️
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