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Mike

Rutherford

Motoring’s most outspoken and opinionated columnist sounds off

IT’S make your mind up time! And the decisions you’ll make could be the difference between you having a day-to-day life as a car user with a 24/7 personal mobility machine parked outside your home, and losing the privilege. The stakes genuinely are that high.

This time last week in Auto Express I said – prematurely, according to some – that the 2024 General Election campaign had already started. And on the very same soggy day, it did – with 4 July officially confirmed as the time to vote. Potentially it’ll be a life-changing moment for motorists and their passengers, who must choose the party they want running their roads, managing their motoring taxes, and revealing dates for the ban (or maybe not) of new petrol and diesel-powered cars.

It’s our ruling politicians who’ve so far been at the front of the queue when it comes to bringing/forcing EVs onto a market where supply still far exceeds demand. The 2030 ban on the sale of brand-new combustion-engined cars was put back to 2035 and may need to be relaxed further. And on a related point, major infrastructure improvements that are essential if pure EVs are to become viable are too damn slow, costly and disruptive.

We urgently need to know exactly where Labour, the Conservatives, Lib Dems, Greens, Reform, SNP and others stand on these and similar matters.

True, they can’t address every motoring issue at present, but they can state their priorities. Autonomous cars aren’t a priority, but the increasingly iffy parking and insurance industries are – and surely need reigning in. So within their imminent manifestos, the parties must spell out how and when they will deliver on their promises.

Who’s going to be brave enough to acknowledge the unpalatable fact that hefty toll fees exist in a Britain where –

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