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Senate votes to revoke California’s ability to set air pollution standards

  • On May 22, 2025, the U.S. Senate voted 51-44 to revoke California's Clean Air Act waiver, eliminating its ability to set stricter vehicle emissions standards.
  • The vote followed Republican efforts using the Congressional Review Act to overturn waivers traditionally granted to California for over 50 years, despite advice against it from the Senate parliamentarian and Government Accountability Office.
  • California and 17 other states had voluntarily adopted California’s stricter emissions rules, including zero-emission vehicle mandates scheduled to increase through 2035, aiming to reduce air pollution and combat climate change.
  • Critics, including Governor Gavin Newsom and Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, called the repeal illegal and harmful to public health, warning it endangers the climate and decades of legal precedent protecting cleaner air.
  • California announced it will challenge the Senate action in court, asserting continued commitment to clean air protections despite federal rollback, while Republicans argue the move protects consumers and energy security.
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The Sacramento Observer broke the news in on Thursday, May 22, 2025.
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