General Motors' bold move rolls out red carpet for Google, Tesla

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If there is one pairing that is proving to be fruitful, it would be the cozy, "first buddy" relationship between President-elect Donald J. Trump and the co-leader of the yet-to-be-established Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) and Tesla  (TSLA)  CEO Elon Musk.

The relationship between the two is already bearing fruit that significantly affects Musk's interests.

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According to a report by Bloomberg, first published on the evening of November 17, the Trump transition team members told the financial publication that the upcoming administration plans to make a federal framework for self-driving vehicles a priority for the forthcoming transportation department.

Such a move would effectively streamline companies working to advance robotaxi endeavors — including Tesla. However, one notable company won't be able to reap the benefits if the legal red tape is lifted.

A robot car of the General Motors subsidiary Cruise on a test drive. picture alliance/Getty Images
A robot car of the General Motors subsidiary Cruise on a test drive. picture alliance/Getty Images

General Motors pulls the plug on Cruise

In a stunning turn of events, General Motors announced late on December 10 that it is shutting down operations of its Cruise robotaxi venture, citing the prohibitively expensive costs of continuing to develop the technology.

“We looked at the amount of money to deploy a robotaxi business and to maintain that business and grow it, it’s quite a bit of capital,” GM CEO Mary Barra told analysts on a call Tuesday. “A robotaxi business is not GM’s core business.”

The move to divest from Cruise is another step in rethinking the "aspirational" goals it made back in 2021. Back then, the goal was to, by 2030, make a sizable chunk of its revenue from running a robotaxi service and by selling electric vehicles. Already, the automaker scaled back its EV production goals, and noted that it would give up on making hybrids if President-Elect Trump makes fuel economy standards easier for automakers to achieve. 

In a post on the social media platform X (formerly known as Twitter) Cruise founder and former CEO Kyle Vogt lambasted Barra's decision, calling the world's second-largest automaker "a bunch of dummies" for what they have done.

"In case it was unclear before, it is clear now: GM are a bunch of dummies," Vogt wrote on X.

GM is expected to combine Cruise operations with its own teams working on autonomous driving technology to share expertise that may lead to more advanced systems in its cars, including fully driverless systems in Chevys and Cadillacs.