Rhetoric from a politician is not the same as actual action.
There are four reasons the logistics will still support ICE vehicles.
1. Multifamily and townhouse infrastructure, especially older communities, were designed with traveling to a gas vehicle in mind. I'm talking old, aged 1970s grad apartment complexes.
2. Coast-to-coast trucking. Do you see a certain popular website that makes people love shopping there. Something about an abstract, barely discernable smile on those boxes? I've see much more "rough loads" like oversized concrete pipe, wood, car haulers, etc, where a giant battery pack will not fit.
3. Sparsely populated rural areas and "ruralish suburbia" barely served by bus service or none at all.
4. Occupations with heavy driving where recharges is lost time, which means lost money. Taxis, real estate agents, food delivery.
Upper middle class residential city dwellers and quasi-"lively" suburbia oftentimes they are the only people that live on this planet and thus do not realize the concrete and asphast grassland with a few trees here are or there do not realize that making a farmer and their smaller lot neighbors ride the bus is not logistically feasible.
My sources? A mix of high and low. I've delivered pizzas for suburban Dominos for three "municipalities"(Maybe 3 sq miles at most of land in an aged, corrupt county with the wealthiest African American population in the nation, corrupt cops that had a likely racist white chief, super high taxes, and still manage to look like it's poor. *-You will not forget deliver to multifamily apartments because those deliveries SUCK walking-wise compared to going to a single family house. Then those commercial business you never pay attention to also wanna have a pizza, so you go to gov buildings, businesses, churches, etc. I even know Spanish-speakers say Hawaiian and Ha-why-an-a.
My mom, being able to save money really well, decided to buy a residential property is "ruralish" suburbia where there be no bus service and ten miles away from the closest developed suburban area with a "FULL SET" of stores, where there are Walmarts, Home Depots, UPS store and the like. The small "town" has a Safeway, some national chains like Advance Auto, a new Autozone, Dominos, etc. The ruralish house is four miles away from this little "speck of commercial development".
Suddenly, the pickup truck or similar bigger vehicles starts making some sense(but NOT a necessity) if you want to "load her up" for the one trip to shop for your stuff.