I've got no opinion about anything until I ride one - but ya gotta believe the engineers & test riders know a little bit....
Motion from ICE is different than motion from electric.
I ripped this from the net.
One must try to understand, why a clutch is necessary in a vehicle in the very first place. An internal combustion engine requires to be running at a minimum pace, in most cases around 790rpm or higher. This is the idle state of the engine, and at lower rpm, the engine will simply stall and not be capable of generating any motion. Now the vehicle requires a great amount of force to initiate the motion (inertia) and this is generated at a higher rpm than speed at which the wheels are revolving (when the vehicle is at rest). What a clutch allows you to do is, engage and disengage the driving force from the motor (or engine) to the wheels, allowing you to apply brakes or keep the vehicle motor idling without the vehicle being in motion. Also, once the vehicle is in motion, the wheels require lesser torque to turn, or increase their speed. And since there are severe limits to the rounds per minute of an internal combustion engine, and more power available in different rev-bands, gearing mechanisms can be used to increase the output speed of the vehicle.
Now, an electric vehicle may not require the motor to be idling, and it can generate the initial torque required to initiate the vehicles motion by drawing extra power from the circuit, as opposed to an engine depending on the momentum stored in a moving flywheel. As a result, it may not be necessary to actually have a clutch mechanism. Also, since electric motors can almost deliver their power in a linear form with increasing power being drawn from the circuit, it becomes redundant to actually add a gearing mechanism. But this may not be true, in case of cars that have complex mechanisms to transfer power from the motor to the wheels, or in the case of hybrids. Even in the case of hybrids, because of the complexity, it is rare to find a manual clutch and gear mechanism - most manufacturers would prefer to offer automatic mechanism on both electric as well as hybrid vehicles.