The Anti-Safety Crusade: Ted Cruz’s GOP Launches Stunning New Attack on Car Safety, Prioritizing Corporate Profit Over Life-Saving Tech

In a move so brazenly pro-corporate and anti-consumer that it beggars belief, Senate Republicans, spearheaded by Commerce Committee Chairman Ted “Cancún” Cruz, have launched a remarkable new crusade: attacking federal safety mandates for new vehicles. The GOP has decided that the most urgent issue facing American drivers—who are already grappling with soaring car prices and a tragic annual death toll of nearly 40,000 on U.S. roads—is not corporate price gouging, but rather the life-saving technology that prevents crashes and protects children.

This controversy is set to boil over on January 14, when Cruz convenes a full committee hearing titled “Pedal to the Policy: The Views of the American Auto Industry on the Upcoming Surface Transportation Reauthorization.” While the hearing is ostensibly about “affordability,” the true target is clear: life-saving regulations.

This time, Ted Cruz steers clear of a shutdown fight

The Attack on Child and Crash Safety

The “existential menace” facing American drivers, according to the Republican-led committee, is not reckless driving or oversized, gas-guzzling vehicles. It is automatic emergency braking (AEB) and alerts that remind a driver their child is still secured in the back seat.

The source materials confirm that Cruz & Co. are preparing to grill automakers for making cars “too safe” and will argue that crash-prevention sensors are “ineffective” and “too expensive.” They aim to head off future mandates touted by safety advocates while scrutinizing the economic impact of existing requirements.

The specific targeting of rear-seat child reminder alarms has drawn the most blistering condemnation. These alarms are directly designed to mitigate the tragedy of hot-car deaths, where parents or guardians unknowingly leave a child in a vehicle. For a party that claims to be “pro-life,” actively opposing alarms designed to prevent children from dying in hot cars represents a staggering and politically toxic disconnect.

The Phony Crisis of Affordability

Senator Cruz’s official justification is that “Americans have been clear that they are hyper-focused on affordability,” claiming the average price of a car has “more than doubled in the past decade” to over $50,000. Cruz lays the blame squarely at the feet of “onerous government-mandated technologies and radical environmental regulations.”

However, safety advocates and analysts are exposing this narrative as a farce built on industry talking points. They argue that the costs attributed to life-saving technology are grossly inflated:

    Low Cost of Life-Saving Tech: Data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) suggests the end-user cost for technology like AEB is far lower than the price inflation cited by the industry, adding as little as a few hundred dollars to the final price.

    Corporate Greed is the Real Driver: Critics point out that massive price spikes are fueled by consumer preference for large, expensive vehicles (like the $70,000 Ford F-150), coupled with the increasing inclusion of profit-padding luxury features like heated steering wheels and massaging seats.

    GOP Actions Fueled Costs: Republicans themselves helped create this affordability crisis by gutting clean-air rules and fueling trade conflicts that disrupted the supply chain and drove up manufacturing costs.

Safety advocates note that every modern mandate—from airbags to seat-belt alerts—has saved countless lives, yet Republicans now dismiss post-1980s safety improvements as a “useless boondoggle.” The message is clear: the “real villain isn’t profit-padding features… Nope. The real villain is the little device that slams the brakes before you plow through a crosswalk.”

The War on Progress and Evidence

The Commerce Committee hearing, which has summoned CEOs from Detroit’s Big Three (GM, Ford, and Stellantis) along with a senior executive from Tesla, is viewed as a platform for Republicans to execute a “stunning, bare-knuckled repudiation of evidence, science, and public safety.” This is not a balanced inquiry but a political exercise designed “to help automakers pocket a few more dollars per vehicle” by eliminating or delaying mandates like the one requiring AEB in new vehicles by 2029.

Contract talks: How Detroit 3 are bargaining with Canada's Unifor -  Automotive News

The timing of this attack is not coincidental. It follows on the heels of the Trump GOP gleefully dismantling electric-vehicle rules, rolling back environmental protections, and greenlighting gas-guzzling pollution. Furthermore, the hearing is strategically timed ahead of the reauthorization of a multi-billion dollar highway bill that funds NHTSA—the very agency pushing these safety regulations.

The core ideological clash is now unmistakable: Republicans want Americans to believe that the government forcing automakers to protect your life is “tyranny,” but that forcing you to pay an exorbitant price for a car packed with luxury features is “freedom.” The January 14 hearing will turn the Commerce Committee into a “Cruz-run corporate complaint desk,” attempting to convince the American public that saving lives is a communist plot and that billionaire CEOs are the “real victims.”

Detroit's Big Three on the big screen? Al Pacino as Sergio Marchionne, Tom  Hanks as Bill Ford Jr. - mlive.com