The Trump administration announced Thursday that New York will lose $73.5 million in federal highway funding after the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration found the state has refused to revoke nearly 33,000 commercial driver’s licenses issued to immigrants whose legal status had since expired, in this latest Trump administration news on federal funding as a policy enforcement tool.
Summary
Trump administration news this week showed federal funding being used as a direct enforcement lever against a Democratic-led state. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said Thursday that a FMCSA review found New York had defaulted to issuing eight-year commercial driver’s licenses regardless of the immigration status or expiration of legal presence documents of the applicant. The state was ordered to review all such non-domiciled CDLs last year and revoke any issued in violation of federal law. It has not done so, Duffy said, which triggered the funding hold.
“I promised the American people I would hold any state leader accountable for failing to keep them safe from unvetted, unqualified foreign drivers,” Duffy said in a Thursday press release. “My message to New York’s far left leadership is clear: families must be prioritized on American roads.”
Governor Hochul’s office rejected the framing entirely. Spokesman Sean Butler said that New York follows federally issued rules when issuing CDLs and that audits completed during the first Trump administration confirmed the state’s compliance. The state’s DMV has previously said it verifies lawful status through federally issued documents for every CDL applicant and accused Duffy of using the issue as political theater.
“This continues a yearlong pattern of Secretary Duffy threatening to withhold money that keeps our roads, subways, and other infrastructure safe for New Yorkers,” Butler said. “We will fight back, and once again we will win.”
The legal dispute is not new. DOT first flagged the issue in December 2025, and California subsequently moved to revoke 17,000 licenses after facing similar federal pressure. California’s compliance stands in contrast to New York’s refusal, which Duffy cited as justification for escalating the funding hold from a warning to an executed reduction.
The $73.5 million cut is the latest in a series of moves in which the Trump administration has used withheld or threatened federal funding to extract compliance from state governments. Previous targets have included New York’s congestion pricing program, subway funding tied to crime metrics, and earlier attempts to redirect Amtrak and commuter rail funding. Courts have blocked several of those earlier attempts.
Trucking industry groups have praised the DOT’s position, arguing that unlicensed or improperly licensed commercial drivers pose genuine public safety risks. The August 2025 Florida crash that killed three people, which Duffy has cited as the catalyst for the nationwide CDL audit, underscores the legitimate public safety dimension alongside the political one.
The pattern of federal funding used as a compliance tool against blue states has become a structural feature of the current administration’s governing approach, with direct implications for the crypto reform agenda and other midterm pressure points that depend on Republican unity in Washington rather than federalism confrontations that could complicate the legislative calendar heading into November.
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