Connect with us

Subscribe

Subscribe

Automotive

Are EV Promises just modern-day Caesar schemes?

“Many promises signed, but not a shovel in the ground.”

Photographer: Craig Adderley

A scam as old as empire-building is alive and well today. The pitch sounds grand: joint ventures that will bring jobs, housing, and economic prosperity, but as history shows, such promises often collapse under their own weight.

Even Julius Caesar faced this con. Ancient financiers pledged riches and development, then failed to deliver. Caesar solved the problem by seizing their estates and enslaving their families. Today’s version is more polished, but no less ruthless wrapped in the sleek branding of “innovation” and “green technology.”

Across Ontario, billions of taxpayer dollars have been funneled into corporations vowing to launch electric vehicle plants. The story repeats across Canada and many U.S. states. Politicians sign contracts that appear transformative, but the benefits rarely arrive. Instead, venture capitalists and corporate elites walk away richer while public coffers are drained.

The protection comes baked into the system. Privacy laws hide the agreements. Non-disclosure agreements keep the terms secret. Politicians craft legislation that shields both themselves and their allies, ensuring that even if deals collapse, accountability never follows. For taxpayers, it means no transparency and no recourse.

Struggling towns and regions make easy targets. Leaders desperate for economic development invite these companies in, offering land, tax breaks, and incentives. Corporations demand vacant properties, often paying little, or no taxes in return. They insist on exclusive deals but deliver nothing tangible.

When delays inevitably arise, excuses range from labour shortages to market volatility to supply-chain hiccups. Meanwhile, local hopes fade. Communities are left with empty land, broken promises, and mounting distrust.

Consider the trail of “ghost plants” scattered across North America. Electric vehicle factories were pledged in Fort Valley, Pine Bluff, and Langston. Shiny press conferences were held. Politicians touted them as engines of growth. Yet not a single car has rolled off the line.

 

Some of these agreements extend for decades; 99-year deals in certain cases locking municipalities into obligations long before a factory is built. It’s bait and switch at its most damaging. The drive to announce “the next big thing” blinds officials to proper vetting. The result? Deals that enrich corporations while towns are left waiting, still without jobs, or investment.

Here lies the biggest danger; no legal framework exists to bind these corporate players to their promises. Nothing forces them to build. Nothing stops them from moving money offshore, and nothing compels them to repay the billions handed over when projects evaporate.

Without oversight, these so-called partnerships function more like financial predation. The politicians sign, the corporations collect, and the public shoulders the loss.

The parallels to Caesar are striking. Then, as now, leaders were seduced by visions of prosperity engineered by private financiers. Then, as now, ordinary people carried the burden when those promises failed.

The difference? Caesar at least reclaimed value by seizing assets. Our leaders instead hand over land, tax breaks, and cash while binding towns into decades-long agreements that forbid scrutiny.

Communities deserve better. Economic development can’t come from wishful thinking and headline-grabbing deals. It requires rigorous vetting, enforceable contracts, and transparency. Without those safeguards, taxpayers will keep funding castles in the air while corporations cash out.

Until this changes, every ribbon-cutting ceremony for a promised EV plant deserves skepticism, because if history teaches us anything, it’s this: when the powerful overpromise, the public pays the price.

Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!

Written By

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Who protects journalists when truth becomes a death sentence?

News & Views

Rising Stronger: The Resilient Heartbeat of an Island Home

JamaicaNews

Black Excellence isn’t waiting for permission anymore; It’s redefining Canada

Likes & Shares

Over 100 global affairs workers expose systemic racism scandal

News & Views

Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!

Legal Disclaimer: The Toronto Caribbean Newspaper, its officers, and employees will not be held responsible for any loss, damages, or expenses resulting from advertisements, including, without limitation, claims or suits regarding liability, violation of privacy rights, copyright infringement, or plagiarism. Content Disclaimer: The statements, opinions, and viewpoints expressed by the writers are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or views of Toronto Caribbean News Inc. Toronto Caribbean News Inc. assumes no responsibility or liability for claims, statements, opinions, or views, written or reported by its contributing writers, including product or service information that is advertised. Copyright © 2025 Toronto Caribbean News Inc.

Connect
Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!