

California has slammed the brakes on a legal battle with the Trump administration, walking away from a fight to reclaim $4 billion in federal funding for its embattled high-speed rail project.
After years of delays and cost overruns, the state dropped its lawsuit against the federal government, opting to push forward with the rail line using state funds and private investment, Fox Business reported.
For California taxpayers, this is a bitter pill to swallow, as they’re now on the hook for a project already plagued by mismanagement, with ballooning costs that could further strain state budgets and divert resources from other critical needs like infrastructure or public safety.
Back in July 2025, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced the federal government was pulling the plug on the long-delayed rail initiative.
The Federal Railroad Administration sent a stern letter to the California High-Speed Rail Authority, yanking roughly $4 billion in funding commitments after determining the project couldn’t deliver on its promises.
The reasons cited—mounting delays, skyrocketing expenses, and significant change orders—paint a picture of a project spiraling out of control, despite substantial federal dollars already spent.
Fast forward to Dec. 23, 2025, when California Attorney General Rob Bonta’s office filed a notice to voluntarily dismiss the lawsuit on behalf of the rail authority, effectively ending the legal push to restore federal support.
The lawsuit had aimed to reinstate the lost funding, but the state seems to have thrown in the towel, citing the federal government as an unreliable partner.
While construction continues on segments like the Hanford Viaduct, observed as early as January 2024, the loss of federal dollars—about 18% of total expenditures—raises serious questions about long-term viability.
On Dec. 19, 2025, the rail authority launched a formal process to attract private investors and developers by mid-2026, hoping to salvage the project with outside money.
“Interest from the private sector in investing in California’s high-speed rail project is strong and continues to grow,” said Ian Choudri, CEO of the California High-Speed Rail Authority. While that’s a rosy outlook, conservatives might wonder if private investors will fare any better than the state in taming this fiscal runaway train.
Currently, 171 miles of the line between Merced and Bakersfield are under design or construction, with nearly 80 miles of guideway and dozens of structures completed, per a recent authority press release.
“This is California’s fault,” declared Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, pointing the finger at state leadership for years of waste and incompetence. From a conservative lens, he’s not wrong—federal funds aren’t a bottomless well, and taxpayers nationwide shouldn’t foot the bill for a project dubbed by some as a “train to nowhere.”
Despite the harsh words, the rail authority insists the loss of federal backing won’t halt progress, leaning on state funding from voter-approved measures and environmental programs to keep the dream alive. For many fiscally minded Californians, though, this feels like doubling down on a bad bet—especially when other pressing needs go underfunded.



