That's today's Chevrolet.
Of course, Mary Barra, the CEO of Chevrolet's parent company General Motors, will say that the phase-out of these internal-combustion vehicles is part of GM's push for more electric vehicles, but, as with virtually every other automaker you can name, this new generation of electric cars is mostly centered on EUVs - sport utility vehicles without the gas-powered motor and, thus, without the guilt. (And for good reason, I suppose; today on the road, I saw two Rivian SUVs in traffic, bumper-to-bumper with each other.) Except that the worse aerodynamics of an EUV will make those electric motors work harder and make them less energy-efficient, the size and scale of said vehicles require more power and more raw material to produce them, and they're not very enjoyable to drive - no more than a utility wagon with a gas-powered engine under the hood. Oh, sure, there will be some electric subcompacts available. But with the electric Bolt models gone, just don't expect to find such vehicles at your Chevy dealer.
Chevrolet is only doing what it can to remain competitive, though, as it needs to give the people what they want - or, rather, what they think they want. Part of the reasons so many Americans keep buying SUVs, even these Americans who had never bought one before, is because they don't know about whatever else there may be. When was the last time you saw a television commercial for a Camaro or a Malibu? I can't answer that question. But I can certainly recall seeing a Chevrolet commercial for an SUV as late as last week. And I've lost count of all the times I've seen those darn Chevrolet pickup-truck commercials starring Walter, the cat who thinks he's a dog.
Oh, well, if you're going to by an SUV of any sort, buy American. Which is why I recommend that you buy a Volkswagen Atlas. Because that SUV ain't German - it's made in Tennessee, it's designed for Americans, and it has all of the characteristics of a Ford Explorer or a Chevrolet Traverse, including extra bulk. The same could be said of the European-built Tiguan and the Mexican-built Taos. All of these monster wagons have followed the rule former Volkswagen AG chairman Herbert Diess set for VW in the States - which is, appeal to American tastes and not so much Americans with European tastes, the latter being the very people that made Volkswagen a permanent presence in the U.S. market in the first place.
As I write this, I am having the fraying cover upholstery on the driver's seat of my 2012 Golf replaced at my VW dealer. Having already had broken and warped exterior trim already replaced earlier this spring, I will have had my car restored to showroom condition or something close to it once the seat cover is redone. Because the only new car I want is my old car, refurbished to look and feel new again. I had hoped to get another base Golf as my next car. When VW decided that the eighth generation of the Golf would not have a two-door model, I was okay with the fact that I wouldn't be able to buy a new car exactly like my old one. When Volkswagen of America, however, confirmed that the eighth generation of the Golf would only be available in the United States as a GTI and an R - the cheapest GTI being five grand more than a base Mark 8 Golf would have cost - it immediately became apparent that I wouldn't even be able to buy a new car remotely like my old one. So if you have a Chevrolet Malibu and you want a new car just like your old one, get to your Chevy dealer hence, because once their 2024 Malibus are gone, there will be no more Malibus for 2025.
And no, I will never buy a Volkswagen made with American tastes in mind. Because the last time VW offered a car like that, it felt like a Chevrolet.
A Malibu.
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