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House Passes Bill That Slashes Solar, Wind and EV Tax Credits (apnews.com) 183

The House passed a sweeping Republican tax-and-spending bill Thursday that rolls back major portions of Democrats' 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, dealing a significant blow to clean-energy projects and the electric-vehicle industry. The 218-214 vote sends the legislation to President Trump's desk ahead of his July 4 deadline.

The Senate version of the bill gives wind and solar projects 12 months to start construction before losing tax incentives, extending the House's original 60-day window. House Freedom Caucus members had criticized the Senate for offering too generous a timeline for renewable energy tax credits they oppose. The legislation indefinitely extends Trump-era tax cuts while adding new deductions for tipped workers, overtime pay, and car-loan interest. Republicans paired these tax reductions with significant cuts to Medicaid and nutrition assistance programs. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the bill will increase budget deficits by $3.4 trillion through 2034 while leaving more than 11 million additional people without health insurance.

House Passes Bill That Slashes Solar, Wind and EV Tax Credits

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  • by abulafia ( 7826 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @02:58PM (#65494400)
    This bill seems tailor-made to fuck red states.

    It will massively suck, but the reactions will at least be entertaining for a little while once people start noticing what happened.

    To any rural USians - I sincerely hope you stay healthy, you won't have a hospital soon enough.

    • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:03PM (#65494428)

      The Republicans, very cynically, set most of these healthcare cuts to hit shortly after the midterm elections.

      They are very aware that they've been lying through their teeth, and they know a good chunk of their base is going to get hurt by this.

      • by ihavesaxwithcollies ( 10441708 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:57PM (#65494642)
        It's so weird, I live in a maga district.

        My GOP representative was walking down the street, fully loaded. He sticks me up and goes, "How much money do you have?". I tell him I have more than enough, don't shoot.

        He goes, "I only rob the poor!" He runs off like a looney tunes character. The guy down the street saw it all and goes, "I'd vote for him again. He robbed me blind twice last week, but he doesn't allow guys to wear dresses."

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
        What scares me is that there was absolutely no attempt to sell this bill to the voters. The last time Trump did this and set up an economic collapse he at least spent some time tricking the voters into supporting it. We actually didn't get that economic collapse at the time because covid hit requiring the government to do a bunch of spending that kept things going. And then Trump lost his election and Biden picked up the pieces like a Democrat always does and started to clean up the mess.

        This time it's
        • What scares me is that there was absolutely no attempt to sell this bill to the voters.

          Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) is on video saying she didn't like the bill, but voted for it after getting carve-outs for Alaska exempting it from strict new food stamp rules for two years - the state with the highest SNAP error rate [azureedge.us] in 2024. Though, because of reconciliation rules, they had to write it a little more obscurely. From Republicans' Absurd Food Benefit Policy Could Reward States Who Waste Money [huffpost.com]

          Because Senate Republicans passed the bill using a special “budget reconciliation” process that doesn’t allow “extraneous” provisions — such as policies directly targeting individual states with only incidental budgetary effects — they had to write the Alaska SNAP carveout so that it didn’t look so obvious.

          So the bill would delay the crackdown for any state with an error rate above 13.3%. (To make it even less obvious, instead of setting the threshold at 13.3%, the text says the exemption applies for states whose error rates exceed 20% when multiplied by 1.5.)

          According to the SNAP error rate numbers [azureedge.us] posted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture this week, Alaska, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon and the District of Columbia would win a delay of the cost-sharing burden if it were based on 2024 error rates. ... They are the ones with the MOST ERRORS in administering the program.

          [States that worked to lower their error rate would be subject to the new stricter rules.]

        • What scares me is that there was absolutely no attempt to sell this bill to the voters.

          There was quite a bit, but the sales was targeted at the extreme Republican holdouts. They REALLY don't care about California votes.

      • The Republicans, very cynically, set most of these healthcare cuts to hit shortly after the midterm elections.

        And the temporary tax cuts -- no tax on: tips, overtime, auto loan interest; and the $1,000 initial Trump Account deposit -- expire in/after 2028, the $6k SSI bonus for low(er)-income senior expires in 2029 and the SALT deduction reverts from $40k to $10k in 2030. The tax cuts for the very wealthy and corporations are, of course, permanent.

      • thing is, rural hospitals budget out far enough in advance that they're gonna start closing *now* over the cuts to medicaid, not after the midterms. similar is true for health care centers looking to break ground now, those guys are gonna walk

    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      The elimination of alternate energy programs highlights the continuing influence of the Koch Network PACs, and trumps grifting instincts to take every crumb for himself

      It does not take much imagination to expect the Koch sponsored junkets to be quietly documented and discretely used to keep their congress-critters, judges and with fellow fossil fuel fan Putin's help, even the president towing their line

      IMO, trump is just there for the grift, and the net results will be a rush to profit for the fossil fuels

      • IMO, trump is just there for the grift...

        Trump doesn't collect his salary. I recall he said that he'd donate the money to the federal treasury but a quick search of the web tells me he's been donating his salary to the National Park Service, Department of Agriculture, and some other federal programs. If Trump was in this for the money then the easiest "grift" would be to keep his salary as POTUS. Who would fault any man for keeping the money paid for doing his job? Is there some grander profit motive for donating his salary? Especially when t

        • I'm just confused on how people believe Trump ran for POTUS to make more money for himself.

          He's making money for his family. Did you miss the stories about his memecoins and MVNO phone service?

          None of this should be normal, but the GOP won't hold him accountable so here we are.

        • The salary for he US President is $400,000 a year, trump makes more than that on inflated room prices he charges the Secret Service

          The amounts of dark money being given to his campaign [opensecrets.org], and the methods he uses to put that money into his pockets are both large and untraceable

          The Presidential salary is simply chump change that he makes a public display of "donating" while lining his pockets with grease

        • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

          IMO, trump is just there for the grift...

          Trump doesn't collect his salary. ... If Trump was in this for the money then the easiest "grift" would be to keep his salary as POTUS.

          Trump's family's grift is literally to the tune of billions of dollars. The presidential salary of $400,000 seems like a lot to you and me, but divide that by a billion and tell me what percentage that is.

    • Not to mention, Trump's tariffs will cause a lot of direct pain for farmers, who were his biggest fans.

    • This bill seems tailor-made to fuck red states. It will massively suck, but the reactions will at least be entertaining for a little while once people start noticing what happened.

      Yup. Also, apparently, many people are unfamiliar with what's in the bill, and will probably be very surprised.

      To any rural USians - I sincerely hope you stay healthy, you won't have a hospital soon enough.

      And this will affect everyone in those areas, not just people on Medicaid / Medicare.

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:02PM (#65494414)

    They'll find a way to pretend Democrats are the only ones responsible for the rapidly-growing budget deficit.

    This sort of thing may be the real reason Republicans are so anti-science and anti-education... they want people to believe their Magic Math.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      They'll find a way to pretend Democrats are the only ones responsible for the rapidly-growing budget deficit.

      GOP has been responsible since Reagan. Democrats usually inherent GOP's econ crashes when they get both chambers, which are not a good time to raise taxes.

      But the rich do bribe Dems also to have lower taxes. We are part plutocracy, I'm just the messenger.

      (Dems perhaps could have put in delayed restoration of taxes into bills, such as kicking in when unemployment drops below 5%. Biden did increase IRS

    • They'll find a way to pretend Democrats are the only ones responsible for the rapidly-growing budget deficit.

      This sort of thing may be the real reason Republicans are so anti-science and anti-education... they want people to believe their Magic Math.

      The sad part is, the general public has believed the lie that the Democrats are the ones screwing the budget repeatedly, while it's typically the Republican administrations that do the most financial damage. It's maddening how predictable it is. If the midterms give the Democrats any power at all, I expect the public to once again believe the damage caused by the Republicans with this legislation was entirely the fault of the Democrats and sweep them right back out of power in the next big election cycle.

      • So many times I have read that it's the Democrats' fault that the poster voted for the GOP.

        We all know the real reason, but that's likely to get me down-modded.

    • They'll find a way to pretend Democrats are the only ones responsible for the rapidly-growing budget deficit.

      And Democrats will have to be good about pointing out that the House "Freedom Caucus", who claim to be vigorous fiscal conservatives against raising the debt, voted for this.

    • The Democrats gave us Trump Rev. 2.
      The first time, it was "anyone but Hillary".
      This time, it was "anyone but Biden or Harris".
      The Old Guard of the Democrats still isn't cultivating an electable candidate. All we get are reruns of the old farts and Willie Brown's concubine.

      • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

        ... and in 2020 it was "anyone but Trump", as it will be again in 2028, assuming we still have elections then.

        Step back a bit, and you realize the real voting pattern is "anyone but the incumbent", because the system has deteriorated to the point where problems don't get solved anymore, so voters are just blindly switching back and forth from one party to the other in the hopes that doing that will somehow lead to improvement. American Democracy has devolved into the world's most elaborate ring oscillator.

  • by skam240 ( 789197 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:02PM (#65494420)

    Decades from now when the symptoms of global warming are diminishing our quality of life people will hopefully remember who is responsible for this travesty.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
      They will still blame woke and trans. Unless we have moved on to another moral panic that I can't even imagine because I'm not a right-wing operative. I see them trying to get everyone panicking over the furries but I don't think that's working because they're just aren't enough of them.

      At the rate we are going we're going to have about 30 to 40% unemployment in 10 years. And then like all collapsing empires we will start invading other countries to loot them and shore up our Treasury.

      Eventually som
    • by drnb ( 2434720 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:36PM (#65494566)

      Decades from now when the symptoms of global warming are diminishing our quality of life people will hopefully remember who is responsible for this travesty.

      Not really. Decades from now, Renewable Energy and EVs will be fine. They are popular, they don't need the rebates. People want these technologies and they will adopt them, rebates or not. Rebates are for unpopular or unproven things, Renewable Energy and EVs are past these points. Want to accelerate EV adoption, build out a public charging infrastructure. An infrastructure that is actually maintained. That will do far far more than any rebate.

      Rebates for EVs don't significantly affect the willingness to purchase an EV. People who don't own a home where they can have their own charger are still dissuaded from getting an EV. A rebate doesn't overcome this problem. EV rebates just benefit the wealthier who already live in such a home, who don't really need the rebate. Sure they like it. Sure they want it. Sure they complain at its loss. But when it comes to buying an EV or not, its their person believe in doing their part for the future, lowering their long term cost of having a car, that will largely decide the issue.

      EVs will win because they are better technology. Because they are lower cost. Want to accelerate EV adoption, build out a public charging infrastructure. An infrastructure that is actually maintained. That will do far far more than any rebate.

      • by skam240 ( 789197 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:43PM (#65494594)

        Not really. Decades from now, Renewable Energy and EVs will be fine. They are popular, they don't need the rebates. People want these technologies and they will adopt them, rebates or not

        Our adoption rate for everything you mention was already too slow even with the rebates and subsidies, without them adoption is bound to slow down. It's basic economics.

        It's already clear we'll never make the 1.5C degree limit that had been hoped for, at this rate I doubt we'll be able to stay below 3C.

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          Not really. Decades from now, Renewable Energy and EVs will be fine. They are popular, they don't need the rebates. People want these technologies and they will adopt them, rebates or not

          Our adoption rate for everything you mention was already too slow even with the rebates and subsidies, ...

          Because car rebates aren't important. EV charging infrastructure investments are what is important. Car rebates and infrastructure investments are two different things. Infrastructure is what will have the bigger effect. Not subsidizing the upper middle class' EV and home charger. This does not help the lower middle class, a well maintained public charging infrastructure would.

          • by skam240 ( 789197 )

            No rebates or subsidies means higher costs which will lead to slower adoption. If the price goes up more people will decide now's not the right time to buy in. While more infrastructure will likely help sales the higher price point will still be a drag on them. It's a negative to adoption either way.

            You were correct before that inevitably this stuff will come out on top and if global warming wasnt the rather pressing and immediate issue that it is I would agree we could do without the subsidies but here we

            • by drnb ( 2434720 )

              No rebates or subsidies means higher costs which will lead to slower adoption.

              Technically, but not significantly. The public charging infrastructure is far more important. Its absence prevents the lower middle class from purchasing lower cost EVs. The lack of reliable and convenient public charging makes the EV rebate moot.

          • Because car rebates aren't important. EV charging infrastructure investments are what is important.

            That depends very much on the planned use for an EV. Where I live in Canada we get no rebate at all and when we were looking at a new car a few years ago for run-about-town use we thought about getting an EV...at least until we saw the price after which we went ICE. Had there been a rebate to bring the EV price down to the point where the reduced fuel costs would have made it a worthwhile investment we'd have probably got an EV. Charging infrastructure was irrelevant to that decision because we only plann

      • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:54PM (#65494634) Journal

        EVs will win because they are better technology. Because they are lower cost. Want to accelerate EV adoption, build out a public charging infrastructure. An infrastructure that is actually maintained. That will do far far more than any rebate.

        This bill eliminates subsidies for charging infrastructure at the end of 2025.

        You were saying?

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          EVs will win because they are better technology. Because they are lower cost. Want to accelerate EV adoption, build out a public charging infrastructure. An infrastructure that is actually maintained. That will do far far more than any rebate.

          This bill eliminates subsidies for charging infrastructure at the end of 2025. You were saying?

          Nothing I said contradicts this. I addressed the EV car buyer's rebate. All I said about the EV charger infrastructure is that it is necessary, unlike EV car rebates. If you want to change the complaint from EV car rebates to EV charger infrastructure investments I won't disagree. But they remain two different things.

          • I think you are delusional if you think rebates don't affect installation of infrastructure.

            • I think you are delusional if you think rebates don't affect installation of infrastructure.

              The lack of maintained and convenient public charging makes the EV rebate moot. And the creation of such an infrastructure is called an "investment" for a reason. We can spend money on an "investment" that opens the lower middle class to EV usage. Or we can spend money on a "rebate" for the upper middle class that would likely buy an EV with or without a rebate. The rebate used to make sense, it got early adopters on board, it helped demonstrate that EVs work and save owners money. We're past that point. EV

              • Do you actually own and drive an EV?

                The Tesla Supercharger network is quite reliable, although coverage could be better.

                However, I think that this isn't the main issue. The main issue is enabling charging for apartment dwellers and others who may find it difficult to charge at home. Rebates to install L2 chargers in apartment parking spaces will help. Rebates to install L2 chargers at offices and other work locations will help.

      • Rebates for EVs don't significantly affect the willingness to purchase an EV.

        That may've been true in the days when your choices were a crazy expensive Model S or a Nissan Leaf that could barely make a trip for groceries. EVs with decent range are available within a price range of people who do watch their budgets, and the tax credit absolutely does factor in to their decision to make a purchase.

        EV rebates just benefit the wealthier who already live in such a home

        You're gonna be really surprised to find this out, but home EV charging can be installed on manufactured/mobile homes, too. No need to own a McMansion.

        Not having home charging is also not

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          Rebates for EVs don't significantly affect the willingness to purchase an EV.

          That may've been true in the days when your choices were a crazy expensive Model S or a Nissan Leaf that could barely make a trip for groceries. EVs with decent range are available within a price range of people who do watch their budgets, and the tax credit absolutely does factor in to their decision to make a purchase.

          It's not really about price. It's mostly about charging. Too many people would simply be dependent upon a public charging infrastructure.

          EV rebates just benefit the wealthier who already live in such a home

          You're gonna be really surprised to find this out, but home EV charging can be installed on manufactured/mobile homes, too. No need to own a McMansion.

          Of course, but a McMansion is not required, although current EV adoption is largely among the upper middle class. Far more modest homes are out of reach for the lower middle class. Home renters have to convince an owner. Those in apartments also dependent upon owners. Unattended charging in a shared space is an issue to some, so you kind of need an owner doing private infr

          • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @05:48PM (#65495032) Homepage

            Anecdotally, I'm convinced what has caused sluggish EV sales in the USA is peoples' general ignorance about how they work. My partner and I both have Chevy Bolts and between the two of us we've been asked:

            "Does it use gas?"
            No, it's entirely electric.

            "Do you always need to find a parking space with a charger?"
            No, we just park it in a regular parking spot like a gas car. It gets charged at night at home.

            "Is it slow, like a golf cart?"
            It has 200hp. It's not slow.

            "Why does it make that weird noise?"
            That's the pedestrian alert tone. It's legally required.

            "How much range does it have?"
            About 200 miles at highway speeds, if you don't drive like a maniac.

            "Is your power bill really high with two EVs?"
            Not really.

            "What do you do if there's a power outage?"
            If the car needs to be recharged, we go to a nearby Supercharger station.

            "Is charging it at a charging station expensive?"
            Compared to gas, yeah, but since we primarily charge at home it's not a big deal.

            "Aren't you worried about it catching fire?"
            No.

    • Decades from now when the symptoms of global warming are diminishing our quality of life people will hopefully remember who is responsible for this travesty.

      They'll never blame themselves or their parents for voting these people in power.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )

      Decades from now when the symptoms of global warming are diminishing our quality of life people will hopefully remember who is responsible for this travesty.

      By "who is responsible" I hope you mean chemtrails, secret government weather modification programs, earth's magnetic field moving, and sunspots or some shit because that is who most of them will actually blame when it gets to the point they can't deny what's happening. Hell they are already being primed for it today. We have multiple states passing laws against "chemtrails" FFS.

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:02PM (#65494424) Homepage

    This bill cuts Medicaid to the bone. Large hospitals in cities can take it, because many of their patients have good jobs and good insurance. But the majority of hospitals in small towns and rural areas depend on medicaid.

    Those hospitals will go out of business. So even if you have employer provided health care or Medicare, you will have to travel 3-6 hours to go to a hospital.

    People will die in the ambulance.

  • Haha fuck Elon (Score:2, Insightful)

    He paid for this election and the leopard still ate his face. https://www.reuters.com/busine... [reuters.com]

    • Re:Haha fuck Elon (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:43PM (#65494592) Homepage

      Musk overestimated his ability to influence Trump, which is kind of on-brand for Elon. And really, if you were the richest man on Earth and libertarianism was the hill you wanted to die on, which of our two parties is closer to that alignment on the political spectrum? Yeah, neither, is probably the correct answer, but if you were a wishful thinker with a bank account the size of Musk's, it's not entirely unreasonable to imagine that the GOP might be the slightly more malleable party.

      It's less a case of leopards ate his face (because Musk's wealth insulates him from the the worst consequences of the GOP's policies) and more that Musk just didn't get his money's worth - like that person who took their Cybertruck off-roading and parts fell off.

  • by TheMiddleRoad ( 1153113 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:15PM (#65494474)

    Then those rural hospitals can stay open while not serving the rural poor.

  • by stabiesoft ( 733417 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:24PM (#65494500) Homepage
    Welcome to the "dark ages" for the US. Anti-science, pseudo theocracy. Wonder when the next Renaissance will be?
  • the it (particularly solar) shouldn't need further subsidy.

    • Woops looks like the title got cut short, should be "says".

      "the" in the body should be "then".

    • by Anil ( 7001 )

      Then why aren't they cutting all the other corporate subsidies at the same time?
      Save us some money and get rid of all the corporate welfare.

    • the subsides on renewables just level the playing field against the subsides on oil, gas and coal. If you want to remove them all, I'm with you, but removing subsidies just because that sector provided less for your election campaign I have a problem with...
    • Now talk about nuclear.

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday July 03, 2025 @03:33PM (#65494558)
    And enjoy homelessness. I am going to now spell some red hot white rage on you fuckers so feel free to mod me the fuck down I've got the karma to burn.

    So if you live in a rural or suburban community you can expect to lose your hospital. You dumb mother fuckers didn't understand anything because you never do. Your hospitals rely on the reliable payments from Medicaid to stay open and we just shut Medicaid down.

    Never mind the fact that a good chunk of you or either on Medicaid or have family that are on Medicaid and just don't know it because the program you're on is funded by Medicaid.

    Now let's talk about what's going to happen when that Medicaid funding goes away. We are talking 1.2 trillion dollars.

    What the name of fuck do you idiots think is going to happen when 1.2 trillion dollars exits the US economy and get stuffed into the pockets of the richest people on the planet?

    You're going to lose your jobs people. We all are. We can fully expect 20 to 30% unemployment. That's on top of them chaos that AI is about to bring...

    You will mortgage your houses, the ones you bought while they were heavily subsidized by the government, and before long the bank will come calling and a sheriff will kick you out of the house you bought.

    There won't be any jobs for any of you either. You're too old and nobody wants you. They'll do the classic thing where they claim to be firing middle management but they're really getting rid of old people like you. And if you're over 30 congrats you're one of the old people.

    I want you to know you're not going to escape this unscathed like you have in the past. The scale and the level of your fuck up is far beyond what you did when you elected Bush Junior or if you're old enough Bush senior or even Reagan.

    And I know you don't believe this and I know that when the shit hits the fan you're going to blame Hillary Clinton's emails on Hunter biden's laptop.

    So I'm really just raging at this point. Because you'll turn against Trump briefly but then the propaganda will hit right before the election and you'll be right back on the Trump train. Even while you're watching the propaganda on your phone over borrowed Wi-Fi from the McDonald's that you took the closest thing to a shower you could at when you scrubbed up in their bathroom after you lost your house.

    I mean come on folks why would Hunter biden's laptop do this to you?
    • When MAGAs say they are cutting SNAP benefits, I immediately think that they are going to screw Farmers. All of that money goes to Farmers. MAGAs just think "fraud, abuse, and illegal immigrants", and I think Farmers. I guess Grocery stores will go down too, and maybe a few children will starve, but I think Farmers. Strange how my mind works.
  • Human civilization seems to have reached it's "carrying capacity", the maximum amount a system allows. The average human has no idea what they're doing or why, the world has grown so complex even the evolutionary hack of "the wisdom of the crowds" is coming undone. The supposedly smart people that understand at least bits and pieces of how ignorant and random the crowd has become generally fail to even imagine that this is a fundamental problem they should do something about, leave along coming up with solu
  • Yeah, it eliminated EV tax credits. But it also eliminates all pretense of balancing the budget.

    This bill primarily does one thing: reduce the tax and regulatory burden on Donald Trump and his friends.

    • I would be much less harsh in my rhetoric if and only iff it reduced the debt. However, it just seems like a massive transfer of wealth to the wealthy, once again, and paid for by starving children, the sick, the future children, and the old.
  • That program was just a bailout for the auto industry then. Why should they get anything now?

  • House Passes Bill That Slashes Solar, Wind and EV Tax Credits

    What a terrible spin-laden uninformative title. That bill includes a ton more provisions than just that. That title makes it seem like it's exclusively a climate bill

    • Tell me then. I was informed from a reasonable Independent that as a Democrat, I tend to "demonize" MAGAs. It does seem easy. So, tell me what you love about the "Big Beautiful Bill"? Honestly, let us talk. I tried before to talk with MAGAs, and in the end it always boils down to a MAGA doing personal, six grader types of attacks.

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