All the wrong EVs are getting canceled


These past few weeks have been particularly brutal for the EV industry — and anyone who believes that electric vehicles are the future. Thanks to slowing demand and policy whiplashes, automakers are on an EV murder spree, killing a host of promising new models. The EV graveyard grows bigger by the minute.

And unfortunately, as is often the case, much of the focus seems to be on affordable models that had the potential to attract new customers. Meanwhile, ugly EVs that cost too much and do nothing to move the needle on EV adoption continue to darken our highways.

None of these vehicles were perfect, but they seem to represent a pattern of automakers doing away with lower priced, lower margin EVs in favor of big, expensive ones. GM couldn’t throw a life preserver to the Chevy Bolt, but it’ll still happily steer you toward the Cadillac Escalade IQ, which starts at around $127,000 and weighs about as much as a small moon.

None of these vehicles were perfect, but they seem to represent a pattern of automakers doing away with lower priced, lower margin EVs in favor of big, expensive ones

Consider the Cybertruck, widely considered to be the most hated car in the world. Cybertruck sales fell 48 percent in 2025, compared to the previous year, according to Kelley Blue Book’s annual electric vehicle sales reports. A more merciful automaker would drive the angular truck out to the desert and put one right between the headlights. But not Elon Musk. He may not have much interest in running a car company anymore, but he seems more than happy to continue to peddle his ugly, dumb truck. Fortunately, there aren’t many takers anymore.

Not only that, Cybertrucks keep getting vandalized. Long after the anti-Musk protests have died down, people are still finding time to work out their anger issues on Tesla’s worst product. Just yesterday, a 67-year-old woman was arrested in North Carolina for using a board with nails in it to scratch up someone’s Cybertruck. People really hate this car.

In a just world, Musk would declare his mission to make an “apocalypse-proof” vehicle a success, and let the Cybertruck program ride off into the sunset. We all know he’s got it in him; the Model S and X, two other low-selling EVs well past their prime, were recently given the boot. The problem with the Cybertruck is that Musk put too much of his own stock in it, hyping it up as Tesla’s “best-ever” vehicle and the “apotheosis of design and utility.” But when the future of your futuristic vehicle looks as grim as the Cybertruck’s, it’s probably time to throw in the towel.



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