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US Senate confirms top car safety official who will oversee Tesla investigations

The U.S. Senate voted Thursday to confirm dozens of nominees including those in charge of highways and pipelines.

The Senate confirmed Jonathan Morrison as the new head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, along with 47 other nominees. This is the first time in three years that the NHTSA had a permanent director.

Morrison, a lawyer who worked for Apple before joining the NHTSA in the first term of President Donald Trump, will supervise a number of safety investigations at the NHTSA. This includes an investigation launched this week on 174,000 Tesla Model Y vehicles from the model year 2021, based on reports that the electronic door handles could become non-functional and trap children.

Morrison stated that the NHTSA cannot wait and see if problems arise, but it must show strong leadership.

The NHTSA announced last month that it would be launching a new website.

It would investigate Tesla

Delays in reporting crashes involving self-driving cars or advanced driver assistance systems.

Since October last year, the NHTSA

been investigating

Tesla has 2.4 million vehicles with self-driving capabilities after four collisions reported, including one fatal accident in 2023.

Separately, the agency opened

An investigation in January

The Federal Bureau of Investigation is looking into 2.6 Million Tesla Vehicles after reports of accidents involving a feature which allows users to remotely move their vehicles.

Tesla has not responded to our request for comment.

Sean Duffy, Transportation Secretary has promised to take action

Speed up the deployment of autonomous vehicles

. This month, the NHTSA announced that it would be revising several regulations based on the assumption that a human is at control.

August is the month of the

NHTSA certifies Amazon's self-driving vehicle

Zoox demonstration vehicles were delivered and a review was conducted to determine if they met federal requirements.

Automakers,

Safety advocates and lawmakers

The NHTSA has been criticized on several fronts including its slow response to regulations

Or, it can impede progress.

The Alliance for Automotive Innovation (which represents major automakers) said: "The auto industry wants and needs a strong NHTSA. We are committed to a collaboration that achieves our common goals: saving life, reducing accidents and deploying cleanest, safer and smartest cars ever." (Reporting and editing by Chris Reese, Leslie Adler, and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)