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This Week in Cars: a Cheaper Taycan, the Golf is Dead, Long Live Stellantis - Car and Driver

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Fiat Chrysler and the PSA Group (of which Peugeot was the main constituent part) have completed a merger that had been in the works for more than a year. FCA and PSA are no more; for better or for worse, the newly formed automaker is called Stellantis.

This Week in Sheetmetal

Mercedes showed off the production version of the 2022 EQA, an electric companion to the small crossover/large hatchback GLA-class. Mercedes hasn't said yet whether the EQA will come to America, but in Europe the car will have 187 horsepower and start at $57,750. That doesn't sound much like an American-market car to us, but perhaps the AMG variants of the EQ cars that Mercedes has promised us will be more appealing, or at least more powerful.

2022 cadillac ct4 v blackwing

Cadillac

We're still more than a week away from the reveals of the CT4-V and CT5-V Blackwing sedans, but Cadillac is telling interested buyers to get their money ready: 250 of each model will be available for reservation shortly after the cars are revealed on February 1.

Porsche announced a rear-wheel drive base model of its EV Taycan, and it will cost significantly less than the car's previous base model. The rear-drive Taycan will go for $81,250 (still more than the cheapest Tesla Model S) compared to the $105,150 base price of the next-cheapest model.

And a death in the family: Volkswagen has officially confirmed that the base version of the eighth-generation Golf hatchback will not come to the United States, marking the end of the line for one of our very favorite budget-friendly cars. Happily, the GTI and Golf R are still expected here for the 2022 model year.

Mr. Buttigieg Goes to Washington

There was, regrettably, an unusually large share of politics-based automotive news this week. It started on Tuesday when, in the last hours of President Trump's term, he pardoned former Google executive Anthony Levandowski. In 2016, Levandowski pleaded guilty to stealing proprietary information related to self-driving vehicles from Google and with the intent to use the information to benefit his own start-up, which was later acquired by Uber. Uber eventually fired Levandowski, who was sentenced to 18 months in jail in the dispute and ordered to pay more than $750,000 in restitution.

President Biden's Transportation Secretary nominee and former mayor of South Bend, shared pleasant policy-based exchanges with both Republicans and Democrats during his confirmation hearing on Thursday. He mused on the possibility of raising the gas tax or tying it to inflation, but after the hearing a spokesperson said such a tax hike was not on the table. Just another day in D.C.

president elect biden announces pete buttigieg as transportation secretary nominee

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Rules are Rules

NHTSA ordered Ford to recall 3 million vehicles with Takata airbags this week. NHTSA said the airbags' inflators could degrade over time, increasing the risk that they would spontaneously rupture and send shrapnel flying through the cabin. General Motors issued a similar recall for 5.9 million vehicles late last year.

Volkswagen has also crossed regulators. The carmaker announced that, after failing to meet EU emissions targets last year, it will pay a $100 million fine. It's a particularly bad look for VW, which agreed to invest billions in developing EV charging infrastructure in the United States in the wake of its 2015 diesel emissions cheating scandal. VW's European rivals Daimler and BMW say they hit their emissions targets for 2020.

Further Reading

In advance of Cadillac's unveiling of the Blackwing cars, the brand has made public a study it commissioned on attitudes towards manual transmissions. The study found that 66 percent of Americans know how to drive a manual transmission and almost 60 percent would be at least somewhat interested to do so again. Seems high to us, but we're not the ones running a market research company.

volkswagen id3

Volkswagen

The Wall Street Journal examinedVolkswagen's struggles to make over-the-air updates work on its Tesla-fighting ID.3. Tesla has been using over-the-air updates for years, but other automakers have only recently started to catch up.

The New York Times wrote about the business case for simulated auto racing. When you've finished that, compare it to our early take on pandemic-induced video game racing from last Spring.

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