This car model from Toyota has taken on a new meaning. pic.twitter.com/dNLMI9GhnC
— MeidasTouch.com (@MeidasTouch) June 28, 2021
Best Tweet on the Subject
Because the car manufacturer leads in campaign donations to members of the “Sedition Caucus” since January 6.
I understand the need for companies to spread the campaign donations around, I’ve always felt that the current system is more extortion than it is bribery, but you can donate to Republicans without being the single most aggressive of people who supported the insurrection at the Capitol:
Nearly three-dozen corporate PACs have donated at least $5,000 to Republicans who objected to certifying the 2020 election, yet Toyota leads by a substantial margin.
………
By the numbers: Data compiled by the left-leaning watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington show Toyota gave $55,000 to 37 GOP objectors this year.
- That equates to a quarter of the bloc that voted to nullify President Biden’s win after the Capitol siege.
- Toyota gave more than twice as much — and to nearly five times as many members of Congress — as the No. 2 company on the list, Cubic Corp., a San Diego-based defense contractor.
- The Japanese automaker’s donations this year included a February contribution to Rep. Andy Biggs, an Arizona Republican who has been one of Congress’ most vocal election conspiracy theorists. According to an organizer of the “Stop the Steal” rally prior to the Capitol attack, Biggs also helped put on that event, a charge Biggs has denied.
What they’re saying: “We do not believe it is appropriate to judge members of Congress solely based on their votes on the electoral certification,” a Toyota spokesperson said in a statement emailed to Axios.
This is a bummer.
I have a 2004 Toyota Prius with about ¼ million miles on it, and I like the car, I consider it my midlife crisis car,* but it is getting long in the tooth, and it’s getting to be time to find a replacement.
I WAS considering a newer Prius, possibly a Prime plug-in, but I try to avoid buying from companies with stupid and psychotic management. (It’s actually it’s a REMARKABLY high bar to clear with American management these days.)
Any recommendations from my reader(s) for a decent reliable high MPG car not from Toyota?
*Yeah, a 2004 Prius as my midlife crisis car. I am the dullest motherf%$#er on the face of the earth.
I like my Honda Accord a lot; 2012, just ~78K miles, haven't had to do anything yet other than normal maintenance.