GM's 3,300 Jobs Cut as EV Dreams Hit a Wall

General Motors just dropped a bombshell—laying off 3,300 workers because their big push into electric vehicles is stalling out. It's a story that hits close to home for so many families counting on those steady paychecks, and it makes you wonder about the road ahead for cleaner cars in America.

GM announced the cuts across three states: Michigan, Ohio, and Tennessee. The hardest hit is Factory Zero in Detroit, where 1,200 people who build electric trucks and SUVs are losing their jobs. Over in Warren, Ohio, at the Ultium battery plant, 550 workers face permanent layoffs, while another 850 there get temporary time off. And in Spring Hill, Tennessee, 700 more are sidelined for now at a similar battery site.

GM says they'll ramp back up by mid-2026, but that's small comfort when bills pile up today. Why now? It all ties back to shifts in Washington. Back on September 30, President Trump's team and Congress axed a key $7,500 tax credit that made EVs more affordable for buyers. They also eased up on rules that pushed carmakers toward low-emission vehicles. Without that nudge, folks are sticking with gas consumers, and GM's EV sales are dipping fast.

The company even reported a $1.6 billion hit last quarter from these changes. It's not just GM—rivals like Ford and Tesla are feeling the pinch too, as foreign makers eye the gap. Watching skilled hands sidelined like this? It stings. These workers aren't numbers; they're the ones innovating the cars of tomorrow. Ultimately, GM still sees EVs as their ultimate goal, but right now, the direction feels uncertain. Will buyers come back, or is this the new normal?

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