The Toyota Corolla you buy in America is mostly identical to the Toyota Corolla you buy in Canada, because safety regulations between the two countries are, like the music of Crosby, Stills & Nash, closely harmonized. The Toyota Corolla you buy in Japan is a little less harmonized, because the rules around safety are a little different. The same for any Corolla purchased in Europe.
Does this make sense? I think what was once a practical concern no longer really works for the modern world, and if we’re tearing up trade norms, we should tear up safety norms as well. I’m not alone in thinking this! One of Japan’s leaders just suggested this is a way to get around some pesky trade issues.


The Morning Dump has been dominated by trade issues lately, and I thought it would be nice to take a slightly more positive spin on what could happen. There are risks, sure, but opportunities as well. This includes more vehicles built in the United States and, perhaps, more access to rare earth minerals from places outside of China.
Tesla is having a weird one today, and a new report shows that the company’s plan to buy back its own leased cars for “robotaxis” isn’t what happened. Instead, the company seems to have just upgraded the software on vehicles and resold them for more money.
Japan Could Give The U.S. A Break On Standards, Which Should Be A Model For Everyone

The entire concept of a 25-year import ban comes from a quirk of car production that made dealers in the United States quite mad. You see, back in the ’80s, non-dealer importers shipped in and then sold better versions of mostly European cars like the Mercedes 500 SEL or BMW 745i Turbo.
This became significant enough that automakers and dealers lobbied Congress to change the law to make cars that don’t fit within U.S. standards illegal to import. At the time, people called it the “Mercedes Law” because of specific concern from Mercedes dealers, but they were far from alone in worry about losing customers.
Why didn’t the United States get these better versions of some cars? Depending on the car, it could be a mixture of emissions regulations and differing safety standards. Automakers, to some degree, have to localize their cars for different places, and it wasn’t worth it, for instance, to certify a manual version of a Mercedes sedan for a market like the United States, where the manual take-rate was so low.
Were these cars any less safe or more polluting than their American counterparts? Maybe, maybe not. Europe and the United States have slightly different goals with regard to emissions regulations, with the former focusing on greenhouse gases and the latter being more interested in local particulates. Still, with some differences, European or Japanese cars are every bit as safe and clean as American ones, and vice versa.
The United Nations, for 50 years, has attempted to make standards more interchangeable with the World Forum for Harmonization of Vehicle Regulations. What’s usually the hold-up? Lighting! This is something we’ve written about extensively, but one of the biggest issues between countries is the way a car’s lights look and operate. Some of this is the amber turn signal. A lot of it has to do with how a headlight beam should be shaped/aimed.
In the United States, we want our beams to be long and wide to cover large distances because we live in a big country with big roads. European and Japanese standards tend to be biased towards illuminating the side of the road, which is important for narrower streets like you find in those places.
These are not huge differences. Still, a mix of various crash/lightning/emissions standards is enough to make carmakers decide not to import certain variations of vehicles in all directions. For instance, Japan doesn’t have an automotive tariff on imports, but these standards may be keeping some cars out of the country (also, most Japanese commuters wouldn’t get much use out of a Raptor).
A piece out in Bloomberg this morning suggests that, at least in Japan, some of this could be adjusted:
Yuichiro Tamaki, head of the Democratic Party for the People, said in an interview Thursday that Japan could offer to reinvest proceeds from maturing US Treasury holdings into super-long bonds in return for concessions on tariffs.
[…]
Tamaki also said easing safety restrictions on imports of cars produced in the US by Japanese automakers could be a bargaining chip that would increase jobs in the US and close the US-Japan trade deficit, while minimizing the impact of the tariffs on Japanese car companies.
“Japanese cars that are made in America, by Americans, and are produced with the employment of Americans — I think it would be good to be able to count such cars as an expansion of exports from America,” he said.
The difference in safety restrictions in the US and Japan, such as the color of brake lamps, is a snag for re-imported cars that could be revised on the Japanese side, he added. He said that a large Japanese automaker was on board with the idea but declined to give further details.
The bit about brake lights is, I think, a mistake (they probably mean turn indicators). Either way, the idea here seems to be that Japan could import American cars (like the RAV4) that are substantially similar and then maybe just swap some lights out and be done.
This would shield Japanese companies from some tariff impacts and help balance out trade a little bit, in theory, and America would be able to roll over its debt.
Why don’t we do this with Europe and Japan in both directions? It shouldn’t piss of the dealers because the dealers can be chosen as the only distribution point for these vehicles. It’s good for the car companies because it helps lower costs. Perhaps a certain number of vehicles every year can be imported/exported and accepted as similar enough?
If someone in Japan wants a PRO4X Frontier, and someone in the United States wants the faster version of the outgoing Supra, why can’t they have that? If we’re rewriting the rulebook, let’s make some better rules!
[Ed Note: It’s worth noting that many American cars are designed for IIHS’s ridiculously tough Small Overlap Rigid Barrier crash test (this is not a federal test, though it’s important to consumers/insurance companies in the U.S.), and European cars have to go through pedestrian protection testing not required stateside. That said, many automakers already try to meet all safety requirements in order to sell in a variety of markets. Do I think it’s best thing for enthusiasts to have regulations that have to work for disparate markets versus ones catered to certain driving environments? Maybe not, but it’s a complex issue worth discussing. I’d like to see how more smart harmonization could ease some of the red tape restricting vehicle trade. -DT].
Mercedes Will Build The GLC In Alabama

Sensing tariff issues will continue to be present in the future, Mercedes is planning to eventually shift production of its Mercedes GLC to its Tuscaloosa, Alabama plant, according to AL.com.
Speculation about adding another vehicle began once Mercedes started talking about measures to deal with the Trump Administration’s automotive tariffs.
The Wall Street Journal had reported that Mercedes could relocate the GLC to the U.S., which is currently made in Bremen, Germany.
The company already makes the GLE, GLS, GLE Coupe, Maybach GLS, EQE, and EQS in the plant. While the GLE is usually the biggest seller in the United States, the GLC isn’t far behind. Just two years! Actually, that’s kinda far.
People Still Care About Rare Earth Elements

Electric cars are here to stay, and while the trajectory may not be what some hoped, this does mean that more rare earth elements will likely be needed.
Perhaps that’s why President Trump was on hand for the signing of a deal by U.S. rare earths company MP Materials and Saudi mining company Maaden. What’s the deal actually say? Like a lot of these commitments, there’s a lot more promise than actual promises. Here’s Nikkei Asia’s take:
In a joint release, the two companies said they “aim to explore opportunities to jointly develop a vertically integrated rare-earth supply chain in Saudi Arabia,” including mining, separation, refining and magnet production.
Rare earths are 17 elements used in an array of modern technology, including powerful magnets needed for EVs, wind turbines and defense systems such as the actuators on missiles and small motors that power drones. MP operates Mountain Pass, the only rare earths mine in the U.S., and aims to build a mine-to-magnet supply chain in America.
MP chief executive James Litinsky said the memorandum of understanding signed by the two was “an important first step towards rebalancing the global supply chain in a moment of transformational growth fueled by emerging technologies.”
Relying on Saudis for energy has never gone wrong for the United States… I kid, but relying on China for everything is also extremely problematic.
As the same report notes, while this deal was being done, the company Shenghe Resources, which is an investor in MP Materials, said it was going to be buying the Australian rare earths company Peak Rare Earths. It’s like the Wild West out there!
Tesla’s Lease Buyout Ban Apparently Had Nothing To Do With Robotaxis: Reuters

Today there’s a report from Reuters showing that Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s claim that it wasn’t allowing people to buy out their leases because it needed the vehicles for robotaxis wasn’t true. Instead it looks like Tesla decided to sell off-lease cars, in some cases after flashing in some software upgrades. From Reuters:
“You don’t have the option of buying,” Chief Executive Elon Musk said at an investor gathering in California in April 2019. “We want them back.”
“Next year, for sure,” he added, “we’ll have over 1 million robotaxis on the road.”
None of that would prove true. Despite repeated promises, the robotaxis never came. Tesla instead found an unusually lucrative way to make money by flipping many of the off-lease cars to new buyers, according to four people familiar with Tesla’s retail operations.
Rather than storing the used cars – a fast-depreciating asset – Tesla started adding features to them through software upgrades. It then sold the vehicles to new customers who would pay thousands more than lease-end buyers would have, the people said.
That’s clever, though, right? Especially during the pandemic. Lease a car, force someone to give it back to you, make software updates that cost you almost nothing to install, and resell the car at a high price. Customers knew what they were getting into when they leased the car, right? The bit about convincing people you’d be selling robotaxis, which juices the stock price, is equally as clever if you can get away with it, if not a little shadier.
Tesla has changed its lease policies, and it probably has nothing to do with robotaxis. Instead, used Tesla values are now down a bunch (partially because of a price war it helped start). The company doesn’t want to be stuck with these cars; therefore, allowing customers to buy out leases makes more sense.
What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD
This is great (greatest?) American Dolly Parton doing a cover of “Shine” by Collective Soul. I just learned this was a thing and had to share.
The Big Question
I know it’s highly unrealistic that we’ll be able to get globally harmonized trade standards, but if we did, what’s the car you’d want?
Top photo: Toyota
My experience is that harmonizing can happen. Most often it originates from economics. In the early 90’s I was on a team trying to harmonize electrical standards for hazardous locations between the US and Europe. If Chevron sent an oil rig from the North Sea to The Gulf of Mexico it had to strip out the electrical and bring it to North America standards. Both a headache and expensive. The team successfully added Article 505 to the National Electric Code.
See NEC1995 Section 500 .
Also, the best Rare Earth LP is Share The Land! Maybe they knew something!
This is great (greatest?) American Dolly Parton doing a cover of “Shine” by Collective Soul.
I prefer to look at it as Collective Soul giving us a decent placeholder version until Dolly got around to recording it for real.
harmonization would make the 25-year shit moot. Reducing or cutting the stupid chicken tax would also be good.
I think the biggest historic barrier to harmonization is gone. Emissions.
In the US, emissions focus on NOx while in the EU, it has focused on particulates. Both have valid reasons for why the different focus and it relates to the different problems that each place faces.
But with the transition to EVs, it’s come down to much more fixable things. With modern electronics, you could likely make a single EV meet the EU, Asian and NA requirements just by software changes on what the dash displays and what LEDs light up with what brightness.
All I want from the rest of the world is more wagons. Hatchbacks add the practicality of one interior volume, but cut most of the trunk away to do so. Wagons are the perfect vehicle, but because my parents’ generation drove them then decided to dump them, the rest of us can’t have nice things…
I love you, Dolly!!!
I love you to, but I told you to stay in the trunk!
This is all pedantic until I get to import a new Toyota Hilux Champ, Toyota Town ace pickup or a Landcruiser 79 series pickup truck.
Ora Funky Cat
Dolly Parton singing Shine is awesome.
But for me personally it gives me a bit of PTSD. I went through a phase a while back of listening to Bluegrass/heavy metal hybrid from Hayseed Dixie, Honey Wagon, Steve’n’the Seagulls
Dang it, now I just found The Native Howl and Billy Strings!
Crap, I’m going back to listening to weird stuff again aren’t I?
Can I interest you in Pickin’ On, who makes bluegrass covers of rock songs?
Or Scott Bradlee’s Postmodern Jukebox, who makes Big Band & Swing covers of pop & rock songs?
And a little less weird, but still not something you hear of every day: the album Zonkey from Umphrey’s Magee.
Yea, I’ve gone down a few rabbit holes myself. 🙂
Both of you might like Panopticon, whose later albums combine folk and black metal in a really haunting way
Have you heard of Dead South?
The song you will likely find is “In Hell I’ll be in Good Company” which is a catching happy tune with dark as hell lyrics.
I love their version of “you are my sunshine” which is in a minor key that really plays up the dark words of the second version. Takes the song and turns it dark as pitch.
I don’t think of them actually as being that weird. It’s like Mumford and Sons with untreated depression.
Second generation Fiesta ST.
GR YARIS GIVE IT TO ME (And a side of Jimny wouldn’t hurt. Honestly, just give us all the lil guys)
Oh and while I’m a card carrying VAG hater I’d be willing to put all of that aside for a Golf R Wagon
This right here. That was also my thought on the WRX wagon for the current generation, I didn’t love the styling, didn’t like the shifter feel, and would be in deep fear of Subaru problems, but for a WRX wagon, I would have had one over my CX-30 Turbo. I even test drove a ’22 XWRX before the 30 Turbo, and it wasn’t enough to sway me, but I can forgo all things for a long roof.
My hot hatch era is on borrowed time because my car already isn’t big enough for a road trip with the baby and dog included and this time next year we’re probably pulling goalie to try for 2. Unless I want to roll the dice on a used European luxury car (which I don’t) and/or spend $60,000+ (no thank you) there just aren’t many enthusiast options out there that would give me the extra space but maintain the driving verve I crave.
A Golf R wagon would literally be perfect. I could probably even be talked into rolling the dice on a barebones or certified M340i wagon (I’m sure I’d deal with endless electronic issues over the years but the B58/ZF8 combo is damn near bombproof and this point). But alas, none of those options exist here in yee haw land.
Yeah it would be truly incredible. My former Mk7.5 GSW 4Mo 6-Speed was the closest you could get in the US but was constrained to base S trim, so no leather/pleather like the lifted alltrack, and it was just incredible. Chassis tuning was that of a 2x priced car, interior despite the cloth seats and no Pano sunroof (which all leaked on Mk7, so good honestly) and base tune 1.8t. It was just excellent, was massively practical for its footprint, got decent gas mileage, looked good and the knock-off high trim LED headlights I got as a retrofit fixed the only real practicality deficiency I had with the thing. Just a shame it has the usual Mk7 water pump and carbon build up issues and the Haldex system is a very maintenance heavy AWD system that inflated running costs. I could have accepted the running costs if it was quicker, but a 180hp 3500lb wagon isn’t quick enough to justify the cash outlay to keep running in my eyes.
I had a MK7.5 GTI and this was my biggest gripe with VW ownership. It just had way too many complicated issues for the price point. My sister had a Tiguan that was the same way, she and my brother in law spent half the time they owned fighting with dealerships over warranty claims.
If I’m going to deal with the foibles of German car ownership I’d rather go all in and do it for a Porsche or BMW that are going to give me enough of a luxury experience and driving joy to offset the headaches. I just don’t feel like dealing with it on what’s essentially a nicer economy car.
…but for a 300+ horsepower semi luxury wagon? I could be convinced haha
Mercedes-Benz E300 plug-in hybrid Wagon. (Which would be badged E350 – but is only a mild-hybrid)
Minus the 4Matic, off-road cosplay gear and Hyperscreen
Color of brake lights could refer more to the unit, thinking like clear taillight assemblies like Cadillac had in Europe vs. our all-red ones.
We’re a few years too late on the harmonization to probably make a meaningful difference to me as far as an entire car goes. It would probably help smaller brands – Mazda could consolidate some of their crossovers in the next generation, Subaru could bring the Levorg over which would make a lot of people happy here. Levorg Layback would be perfect for those missing older Outbacks.
What I would enjoy is more manual choices in some of the models we already have, that previously offered it. But in some instances they had already hung around in US versions, longer than they did globally – some Subarus, warm Civics, even the GTI. It’s hard to imagine getting some of those options back now.
The special standards that cars sold in the US have to meet are protectionism, pure and simple.
“[Ed Note: It’s worth noting that many American cars are designed for IIHS’s ridiculously tough Small Overlap Rigid Barrier crash test “
“Ridiculously tough” is real world scenarios: NOVA just released 2nd episode of ULTIMATE CRASH TEST :
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/series/ultimate-crash-test/
Yeah, the IIHS didn’t come up with that to punish automakers, they did it because they saw a lot of similar crashes in real life that resulted in serious injuries.
They do the best they can, but it’s hard to replicate the real world. I have serious concerns about the CT in a pile-up, and expect those exterior panel knife edges to cause horrific outcomes.
You’re not wrong, but that doesn’t change the fact that it is a very difficult scenario to design for without adding a lot bulk to the front of cars.
I want a Jimny!
GLC in Alabama, I nailed it 🙂
*sits here in smug-yet-obvious satisfaction*
I’m still semi-appalled that in all of our decades of standardization and cost savings and economies of scale, that along the way the legislators didn’t all better align their standards. We’ve had plenty of “world cars” over those years, but it still feels stupid to me that any of them would need much more than a headlight adjustment at the inspection shop. All the other stuff should be pretty standardized, but it’s not.
A PHEV Crown! Either the Crown Sport lifted hot hatch we’ll never get here or the Signia PHEV. They’re faster that their base hybrid counterparts, similarly fuel efficient, and have a decent all electric range. I’d love to talk myself into a Signia as my next car because on paper it’s just about perfect if I want to be honest about what I actually need (BIG if)….but man the joyless, isolated driving experience is a tough sell after two hot hatches in a row.
Speaking of world-class women doing incredible covers of songs that seem way out of their genres, I present Kasey Chambers with a surprise:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S70xek3x4ro
I’d never heard of that person, but even given how basic the concept and obvious the arrangement, the execution of that is stunning. She seemed genuinely moved and it was quite a stirring performance. It definitely benefitted from me listening to it before glancing at the title, surprise was right! Thank you for sharing.
Most welcome. Multi-award-winning, Recording Hall of Fame artist in Australia, almost a national treasure.
That SC01 from the other day would be nice to import. There are a few European wagons I’d like to get my hands on as well.
I dream about an M340i or S4 wagon all day every day
SC01 is Very tempting. Why I have a hard time supporting any tech export from China;
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/chinese-energy-tech-exports-found-to-contain-hidden-comms-and-radio-devices
That Dolly video has me feeling like I just ate some caps and stems. Good stuff!
Can we please enhance our pedestrian safety tests so the cybertruck can finally be illegal to be seen on public roads?
Wishful thinking, but good luck convincing the average American or our current administration to care about the safety of pedestrians or cyclists….
Why are you walking when there is a perfectly good car you could be driving???
You mean a perfectly good 6,000 pound body on frame truck I could be driving for the low price of $999 a month?
I drive my F150 across my driveway to get into my F250 like a real American!
Hell yeah brother! If you don’t have a 4 figure Truck Mortgage you’re a filthy commie!
I do want to see pedestrian safety standards raised, but like CAFE I worry that they will put extremely tough standards that only apply to passenger cars while exempting SUVs and trucks because they are “work vehicles”.
Aren’t those CAFE standards just swell? If you want a normal sized car it’s a turbo 4 cylinder for you at best….but if you’re willing to go into crippling debt for a 3 ton vehicle you don’t need you can have V8s, straight 6s, diesels, etc. to your heart’s content!
Suzuki Jimny
100% this.
That is all.
YES THIS!
I really wonder how many people who say they want a Jimny because it’s a forbidden fruit would actually buy one if it were available in America. They are pretty darn small and have a top speed of 90 MPH – two things that normally turn off American car buyers.
It is a cheaper alternative to the 2 door jeep wrangler and they sell ok. Not everyone wants a giant 4dr pick up truck but that is what is on the lots. I would strongly consider a new one. It would be way better than some boring a$$ crossover.
Cheaper but also much smaller. Living in San Diego I see Jimnys from Mexico pretty frequently and I think a lot of people claiming they want one of these don’t have a concept of how small it is.
Per this article the Jimny is 34″ shorter, has an 8″ shorter wheelbase, and is 9″ narrower than a 2 door Wrangler JL.
https://www.drive.com.au/reviews/naughty-shorties-jeep-wrangler-versus-suzuki-jimny-off-road-comparison/
All of which piques my interest.
Then you are not the average Jimny-coveting American I’m talking about.
Yeah, I like my little vehicles.
The jimny 2 door sells for $19k us and the 4 door for $24K us dollars so a LOT cheaper than a wrangler.
Sure, I’m not arguing that. I still say a lot of people claiming they want a Jimny because they look cool have not actually seen how small they are. They look noticeably small next to other cars on California freeways.
a 5 door is the same length and nearly same wheelbase(20mm) as a honda hr-v but taller and 6 in narrower.
Not sure where you’re getting your specs from. I just compared a 5 door Jimny and 2025 HR-V and they’re not even close except for wheelbase.
Jimny 5 door:
L 150.4″
W 64.8″
WB 102″
Honda HR-V:
L 179.8″
W 72.4″
WB 104.5″
So google gave me the wrong length.
I think we need to disagree. But I will not concede that the 5 door is a good choice for those that want to save a lot of money over a wrangler.
I will check my results better next time
My one disappointment with the new Bronco was the size. It’s about 20% larger than I’d have liked. A Jimmy might be a tad small, but I do think there would be a market for it. I see a lot of people around here basically daily-ing side by sides when the weather is decent. This would be a viable alternative for that group.
I agree but others here say we are completely wrong.
Well, the Big Three once said the same thing about imports, and look how well that turned out for them.
I agree it wouldn’t be a huge market, as in it wouldn’t displace the reign of the American behemoth, but it could easily turn into the next VW Bug (assuming something like the Slate doesn’t capture that market position first).
Imagine a 2 door Jinmy 4wd with low range all for $18K and an 4 door for $24K. Yeehaw!
Not saying you’re wrong at all, I get the appeal. I’m saying I think a lot of people who covet the Jimny have never actually seen one in person and may change their mind once realizing how small these really are. Small vehicles have historically not sold well in the US.
I would definitely consider it. A cheaper and almost-certainly more reliable jeep alternative? I’d be interested at the right price for a stripped down model.
4 door! https://gazleysuzuki.com/models/jimny/5-door/
They’re still tiny next to anything you could compare to on the US market. I parked next to one a few weeks ago.
All someone has to do is tell the brain-dead homunculus in the White House that people are trying to privately import “unsafe foreign cars that have only had to pass woke pedestrian impact tests and not our beautiful and extensive crash tests” and no one will be able to import anything ever again.
Are there still rules banning the types of advanced LED headlights other countries get?
If so, that’s about all I want from other countries’ auto markets.
I’m probably the only person here who looks at our domestic market and finds few to no places it could be improved for me by importing an existing overseas product.
I think much of that is gone now. The Rivian R1S has that animated-pixel-style headlight that used to be banned, but we it’s OK now. I’ve been wanting to enable it on my BMW i3 somehow….
I think Audi’s adaptive LED headlights that can change patterns or something are still illegal here, though.
I apologize for posting something that might be informative and will make sure it never happens again.
For as much grief as current Audi deserves the one thing they still do better than just about everyone else is their lighting packages
Eh, I think there are plenty of gaps that aren’t worth it to federalize something for to manufacturers.
Like the ranger plug in, which isn’t being sold here because the us is obsessed with Full size pickups and to protect the F150 Plug in
Maybe so, but nothing that interests me, per the question.
Like a good American, I am obsessed with full size trucks and have less than zero interest in a Ranger, plug-in or otherwise.
Guess I never got that gene. Modern full sizes are just too big.
I mean the hoods have crept up and up and up to the point that middle schoolers are invisible 10 ft away. I think 98% of people that buy a full size would be fine with a mid size.
Our mid size pickups are the default for most of the world. And everyone else builds tows and hauls things too
Not especially interested in what other people think I “need” or “would be fine with”, or what people in other countries do.
Call that what you want, but most cars we own and celebrate here are beyond the scope of “need” and well into “want”.
Good Ol’ american exceptionalism.
“That works fine there, but I don’t like it so I wont try it and its bad.”
Your error is assuming I haven’t considered all options and finding my truck works best for me.
A Ranger would do nothing meaningfully better for me than my truck and would be significantly less useful.
If other people, whether here or overseas, make a different buying choice in response to their own tradeoffs and values, I’m happy for them to buy what they want and use it how they want. If only they’d extend the same courtesy to me.