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UpInArms

(53,995 posts)
17. General Motors
Sat Dec 27, 2025, 05:10 PM
Saturday

Rick Wagoner

The General Motors CEO who killed the original electric car is now in the electric car business

Rick Wagoner, the former CEO of General Motors who resigned under pressure in 2009, is back in the car business, joining the board of ChargePoint, which maintains a network of charging stations for electric cars.
This would normally be an uneventful appointment—industry veterans often advise promising startups—save for Wagoner’s history as the executive who killed GM’s first electric car.

In 1996, GM rolled out the EV1, an innovative battery-powered car. It was introduced in response to a 1990 California law requiring car makers to produce zero-emissions vehicles in order to continue selling conventional automobiles in the state. GM produced 1,117 EV1s, but made them only available for lease.

While limited by their small size (just two seats) and a range of less than 100 miles, the car was popular among environmentalists and celebrities like Tom Hanks and Mel Gibson.

As GM was promoting its foray into renewable vehicles, it was simultaneously lobbying to weaken the California law. When the auto industry succeeded in watering down the regulations in 2001, GM, under Wagoner, soon after terminated the EV1, citing limited demand.

But GM just didn’t stop making the cars, however; it recalled the vehicles and destroyed them, over the objections of their drivers, who offered to buy them from GM. In the documentary, Who Killed the Electric Car?, released in 2006, director Chris Paine contends GM sabotaged the EV1, fearing electric vehicles would undermine its conventional business. GM denied that accusation.

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I find it incredibly sad. hlthe2b Saturday #1
I loved the sears catalog UpInArms Saturday #2
one bathrm in house, yikes! msongs Saturday #11
Trust me you can survive 😄 zeusdogmom Saturday #23
We had 5 in the house with 1 bathroom, dad would be in there dem4decades Yesterday #33
Most houses had only one bathroom until maybe the '60s. Ocelot II Yesterday #34
Sears was a victim of bad management Keepthesoulalive Saturday #3
You Ain't Kidding! ProfessorGAC 22 hrs ago #41
I worked for Sears when I was moniss Saturday #4
When we were first married (dinosaurs still roamed the earth), Sears was where you went to get everything. Vinca Saturday #5
Same here. We bought appliances, tools and housewares there until the mid-80s. Ocelot II Yesterday #35
Funny, I was thinking about this again and it occurred to me that when I was a teenager, I'm pretty sure Vinca Yesterday #37
We bought a lot of Craftsman tools, which was Sears' store brand. Ocelot II Yesterday #39
The acquisition by K Mart was not a very good idea MichMan Saturday #6
Was Kmart sandbagged with a goal in mind? bucolic_frolic Saturday #7
Lampert Lost A Few Hundred Million.... ProfessorGAC 22 hrs ago #42
General Motors UpInArms Saturday #17
Some of us may remember using a outhouse with a Sears catalog Kaleva Saturday #8
Sear grew into a marketing suburban powerhouse after WWII bucolic_frolic Saturday #9
Sears should have been looking Greg_In_SF Saturday #10
Yep, they had everything in place to give them a leg up on it misanthrope Saturday #15
Yup. Sears should have been Amazon. Captain Stern Yesterday #25
I just read yesterday that they co owned Prodigy back in the day along with IBM fujiyamasan Yesterday #26
Wasn't it Sears that had the Ayn Rand-worshipping dickhead CEO Aristus Saturday #12
That's makes no business sense to me JI7 Saturday #14
Or to anyone else with a functioning brain. Aristus Saturday #19
Eddie Lampert fujiyamasan Yesterday #27
Also asking how they can be a CEO anywhere after blowing it. The Madcap Yesterday #31
Didn't they go out of business a few years ago ? JI7 Saturday #13
I sure thought so. News to me. B.See Saturday #16
Sears did themselves in. I recalled when I worked for JCPenney's, that Sears, the opposite anchor store in our local SWBTATTReg Saturday #18
The Sears Christmas Catelog was the boomers Google Norbert Saturday #20
Loved that. maveric 21 hrs ago #43
Sears holiday portraits were a tradition Danmel Saturday #21
I thought they already went out of business. Jacson6 Saturday #22
Sears went down not to one bad decision... Xolodno Saturday #24
A series of bad decisions made over the span of decades fujiyamasan Yesterday #28
Sears catalogs were... BH liberal Yesterday #29
I had no idea they still existed. GoCubsGo Yesterday #30
Successful thriving public companies don't sell out to vulture capitalists MichMan Yesterday #32
Don't forget the Trump connection.... LPBBEAR Yesterday #36
Fascinating! Sears Roebuck & Co. Changed How America Shopped MineralMan Yesterday #38
It's really sad and it didn't have to be this way. They were intentionally gutted and destroyed themaguffin 22 hrs ago #40
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