California's billion-dollar bullet train gets the '60 Minutes' treatment, and officials admit they had no idea what they were doing
CBS News' "60 Minutes" aired a segment Sunday dissecting California's high-speed rail project, and the officials responsible for building it delivered the kind of confessions that would sink a private company's stock price overnight.
California's Secretary of Transportation, board members, and outside reviewers all acknowledged, on camera, that the project was sold to voters on promises the state couldn't keep.
Rep. Vince Fong, R-Calif., set the tone early:
"We're now in 2026. There are no trains. There's no track laid. It was a complete bait and switch."
That's not partisan spin. That's arithmetic. In 2008, California voters approved nearly $10 billion in taxpayer funds via municipal bonds for an 800-mile high-speed rail system connecting San Francisco and Los Angeles. The estimated cost at the time was roughly $33 billion. Today, the latest estimate to connect the two cities sits at over $125 billion, nearly quadruple the original amount, Fox News reported.
The state now expects trains to begin running in 2030, a decade after the initial goal, and the line will run about a third of the promised distance, between Bakersfield and Merced.
Officials say the quiet part out loud
What made the "60 Minutes" segment remarkable wasn't the cost overruns. Those have been public for years. It was the candor of the people who built this mess.
California Secretary of Transportation Toks Omishakin told CBS: "There were mistakes made. Some of the criticism on this project, I think, is very fair."
He went further: "I don't think the voters fully understood — and neither did we in the public sector — what it was going to take to actually get this project delivered."
Read that again carefully. The state's own transportation secretary is admitting that voters were asked to approve billions of dollars for a project that the government itself didn't understand. This isn't hindsight. This is an admission that the public sector took the money first and figured out the logistics later.
California High Speed Rail Authority board member Anthony Williams was even more blunt. He told CBS that the financing simply wasn't there when construction started:
"It wasn't. Let's be real. We had a lot to learn, we had a lot of growth to do, and, you know, it's arguable whether we should have been clearer about that."
"Arguable whether we should have been clearer." California collected nearly $10 billion in bond money from voters based on projections that were off by a factor of four, and a sitting board member calls transparency "arguable."
A project even its supporters can't defend
Lou Thompson helped found Amtrak and served on California's high-speed rail peer review group until 2024. When CBS's Jon Wertheim asked whether Thompson thought he'd see the system built in their lifetimes, Thompson didn't hedge:
"I don't know. I'm dubious. I'm dubious. Absent a national political will to work with the states to create some of these systems, I think it's going to be in, of course, my lifetime almost certainly not. But maybe yours, I don't know."
This is a man who spent his career building and reviewing rail systems. He's not a conservative critic looking to score political points. He's a rail advocate who looked at the numbers and concluded the project may never be finished.
The project began under former Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown, and it has become one of the most visible symbols of progressive governance's core dysfunction: the gap between the vision announced at the podium and the reality delivered on the ground.
The federal government pulled the plug
In July 2025, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy announced the termination of $4 billion in unspent federal funding by the Federal Railroad Administration, declaring the project a mismanaged and over-budget boondoggle. The decision cited 16 years of failure and no completed high-speed track.
Sixteen years. No track. Billions spent. And a revised plan that replaced San Francisco and Los Angeles with two Central Valley cities most Americans couldn't locate on a map.
Cutting federal funding wasn't punitive. It was responsible stewardship of taxpayer money. When a project has consumed billions, missed every deadline, and the people running it admit on national television that they didn't understand what they were doing, continued funding isn't an investment. It's enabling.
The real cost of government fantasy
California's high-speed rail project is instructive not just for what it wasted but for what it reveals about how progressive governance operates. The pattern is familiar:
- A sweeping promise sold with aspirational language and round numbers
- Voter approval secured before real cost analysis is complete
- Years of construction delays, cost revisions, and scope reductions
- Officials who admit, only after the money is gone, that they didn't fully understand the project they were building
- A final product that bears almost no resemblance to what was promised
This is the lifecycle of government megaprojects that prioritize political ambition over engineering reality. The bullet train was never primarily a transportation project. It was a statement of progressive identity: California would be the state that did what Europe and Japan had done. The vision was the product. Delivery was an afterthought.
And now the state's own officials are telling "60 Minutes" that voters were misled, financing was insufficient, and the finished system, if it ever arrives, will connect Bakersfield to Merced at a cost that could have rebuilt half the state's crumbling highways.
No accountability, no consequences
The most striking feature of the "60 Minutes" segment isn't the scale of failure. It's the tone. These officials aren't apologizing. They're explaining. They describe the waste of tens of billions of dollars the way someone describes a learning experience at a weekend seminar. "We had a lot to learn." "We had a lot of growth to do."
In the private sector, a project that quadrupled its budget, missed its deadline by a decade, and delivered a fraction of what was promised would result in firings, lawsuits, and possible criminal investigations. In Sacramento, it results in a "60 Minutes" appearance where you get to describe the whole thing as a journey of institutional self-improvement.
No one was fired. No one was charged. The voters who approved $10 billion will never get a refund.
California promised a bullet train. It delivered a monument to government incompetence, built on bonds its own officials now admit were sold under pretenses. And somewhere between Bakersfield and Merced, the tracks that don't exist yet carry the weight of every promise Sacramento ever made.



