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Newsom accused of lying after delay in revoking migrant driver licenses
Summary
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy accused Governor Gavin Newsom of lying after California delayed cancelling about 17,000 commercial licenses for non‑domiciled drivers; the DMV says the cancellation date moved from Jan. 5 to March 6 while it works with federal authorities. Undetermined at this time.
Content
California officials and the U.S. Department of Transportation are publicly at odds after the state moved the planned cancellation date for roughly 17,000 commercial driver licenses issued to non‑domiciled drivers. The DMV announced the revocation deadline was extended from January 5 to March 6 so it can work with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to address concerns about the licensing process. Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy said the governor was "lying" and that no valid extension exists. The dispute follows federal findings and scrutiny after a deadly October crash involving a licensed driver.
Key points:
- The California DMV announced the cancellation date for the affected commercial licenses was extended to March 6 to coordinate with federal officials.
- Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy publicly disputed that extension and reiterated a January 5 deadline in social media statements.
- The issue involves about 17,000 licenses described in reports as non‑domiciled commercial driver licenses and follows a federal audit that flagged compliance failures.
- Legal and enforcement actions have been mentioned publicly, and a class action was reported challenging some revocations.
Summary:
State and federal officials are in disagreement over the timeline and process for revoking certain commercial driver licenses; the DMV says it has extended the cancellation date to March 6 to resolve federal concerns, while the U.S. DOT maintains the earlier deadline. Undetermined at this time.
