Trump Says Federal Government Won’t Fund California’s High-Speed Rail Project

President Donald Trump said the federal government will not continue to pay for California’s high-speed rail, calling the costly and delayed project “out of control” during a meeting with Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney on May 6.
The president said he told Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy about his decision.
“That train is the worst cost overrun I’ve ever seen,” Trump told reporters Tuesday. “It’s totally out of control. It’s a stupid project that should have never been built.
“I told our new secretary of transportation we’re not going to pay for that thing,” he added.
Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office said ending the project now would be wasteful, Villaseńor said.
“With 50 major structures built, walking away now as we enter the track-laying phase would be reckless—wasting billions already invested and letting job killers cede a generational infrastructure advantage to China,” spokesman Daniel Villaseñor told The Epoch Times in an email.
But funding came up short again this year. The High Speed Rail Authority asked lawmakers to provide another $7 billion by June 2026 to begin the first stretch.

At an event in January, Newsom said his administration remained committed to the project in response to criticisms.
“To the cynics that are filled with cynicism that stand on the sidelines and don’t engage, we’re here making this work,” Newsom said. “Finally, we’re at the point where we’re going to start laying down this track in the next couple years.”
The state envisioned the railway to span 463 miles and run from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
According to Jamey Matalka, the authority’s chief financial officer, about $13.8 billion has been spent on the project so far, of which about 23 percent was federal funding.
The prior Trump administration terminated a federal agreement in 2019 to provide nearly $1 billion for the project, saying the authority had failed to make reasonable progress.
In 2021, the Biden administration reversed the decision and increased the funding to over $3 billion.

California state Senate Minority Leader Brian Jones criticized the rail project in February.
The poll included California’s registered voters and was conducted Feb. 10 and 11. Emerson College is in Boston.