Automakers, including Mercedes-Benz and BMW, have urged the EU to weaken the policy, amid slower-than-expected electric car sales. Sweden’s Volvo Cars and others say they have already heavily invested in the transition to electric, and any reversal on the ban would be a betrayal.

  • tardigrade@scribe.disroot.org
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    2 months ago

    It would be great if the EU would not reverse the ban, but I am afraid that Spain’s PM Sanchez isn’t doing that for some economic or environmental reason. He’s just fighting for his political survival, and topics like EVs and tge Gaza war helps him to distract from the corruption scandals of his government, close party allies, and family members. And ‘Sweden’s’ Volvo Cars is majorily owned by Geeky from China, a country that Sanchez considers a Spanish ally and investor (so human rights are not Sanchez’s thing it seems).

    • Ismay@programming.dev
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      2 months ago

      While the rest of EU is still following the US that is actively trying to break the EU…

        • tardigrade@scribe.disroot.org
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          2 months ago

          Yes, and Sanchez and his party have close ties to China. Sanchez’s government even contracted China’s Huawei with the country’s judicial wiretap system (while at the same time banned Huawei from its public telcom network over security reasons). So the Spanish law enforcement, including those fighting corruption, now depends on China.

          And let us not forget the Gate Center, a Spanish-Chinese so-called ‘think tank’ with close ties to the government.

          [Edit typo.]