78% Of IRA Project Spend In Red Districts; Guardian Asked 18 GQP Members For Comment On Climate Policy; None Responded
Billions of dollars in clean energy spending and jobs have overwhelmingly flowed to parts of the US represented by Republican lawmakers. But these members of Congress are still largely reticent to break with Donald Trumps demands to kill off key incentives for renewables, even as their districts bask in the rewards. The president has called for the dismantling of the Inflation Reduction Act a sweeping bill passed by Democrats that has helped turbocharge investments in wind, solar, nuclear, batteries and electric vehicle manufacturing in the US calling it a giant scam. Trump froze funding allocated under the act and has vowed to claw back grants aimed at reducing planet-heating pollution.
Republicans who now control Congress have to decide if they will eliminate the IRAs grants and, more crucially, the tax credits that have spurred a boom in clean energy activity in their own districts. A total of 78% of this spending has gone to Republican-held suburban and rural districts across the US, according to data from Atlas Public Policy. Of the 20 congressional districts that have attracted the most clean energy manufacturing investment since the IRA passed in 2022, 18 are represented by Republicans, according to Atlas. The top three districts, in North Carolina, Georgia and Nevada, represented by Richard Hudson, Earl Carter and Mark Amodei, respectively, have collectively seen nearly $30bn in new investments since the legislation.
Despite this, none of the 18 Republican representatives contacted by the Guardian would comment on whether they agree with Trump that clean energy incentives should be scrapped.
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The top grant from the IRA, worth $500m, went to a General Motors plant in Lansing, Michigan represented by Republican Tom Barrett the DoE data shows. And though the biggest loan of $15bn went to Californias Pacific Gas and Electric Company utility to expand clean power and modernize infrastructure, the second and third largest went to battery plants in Glendale, Kentucky, and Kokomo, Indiana, represented by conservatives Brett Guthrie and Victoria Spartz, respectively. Hageman, Guthrie and Spartz did not respond to requests for comment.
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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/31/clean-energy-spending-republicans-trump