Skip to Content
Streetsblog California home
Streetsblog California home
Log In

Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao resigned following Wednesday's violent riot at the nation's capitol by predominantly White supporters of President Trump, reminding many advocates of her department's consistent complicity in perpetuating police brutality and White supremacy in America.

In a statement on Twitter, Chao cited Trump's decision to encourage a group of his supporters to storm the Capitol building, calling the siege "traumatic and entirely avoidable."

"It has deeply troubled me in a way I simply cannot set aside," she said.

Progressive politicians and pundits slammed the decision as disingenuous and self-serving, speculating that Chao was absolving herself of her responsibility to invoke the 25th Amendment, an obscure provision of the Constitution that sets into motion the removal of a president if the Vice President and a majority of the Cabinet declare a president unfit to serve.

Even prior to her resignation, Chao's tenure at US DOT was largely condemned by sustainable transportation advocates, not least for her failures to condemn racist policing which provides pretext for many of the harassment and murder of BIPOC by law enforcement. Under Chao's leadership, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration released a document at the height of this summer's historic Black Lives Matter protests that endorsed the expansion of armed law enforcement in our national traffic safety efforts.

Chao also famously stood by Trump's side at a press conference following the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Va., when he noted that there were "some very fine people" among the Neo-Nazis and White nationalists present at the rally, one of whom murdered counter-protester Heather Heyer in a deliberate vehicle ramming attack. No "deeply troubled" statement from the Secretary followed.

https://twitter.com/AkiPeritz/status/1347265451374620672

Despite a typo in her initial tweet — believe us, we wish we could go back in time to January, 2020, too — representatives for the Department of Transportation have since confirmed that Chao's last day in office will be on Friday. They have not responded to a request for further comment on her departure.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog California

The Week In Short Videos

Slip lanes, e-bike incentives, and a bonus video from NYC.

January 16, 2026

Santa Monica Parking Enforcement Vehicles to Use AI Cameras to Ticket Bike Lane Violations

Similar to on-bus AI cameras for bus lanes, but with two new wrinkles: cameras will be on city cars, and will detect bike lane blockers

January 16, 2026

Friday’s Headlines

I never thought about what happens if you violate the same law, on one trip, in multiple jurisdictions.

January 16, 2026

Papan Wants to Draw a Legal Line Between E-Bikes and Electric Motorbikes

Pretty sure the pictured bike should never be referred to as an e-bike.

January 15, 2026

$3 Million Now in the Bank to Support Signature-Gathering Effort for Regional Transit Measure

Transit funding advocates have the money. Now they just need almost 200,000 signatures.

January 15, 2026

Monrovia’s ‘Haiku Park’ is Now Open

Satoru Tsuneishi Park honors the acclaimed poet once incarcerated in an internment camp.

January 15, 2026
See all posts