Ralph Nader: Obama “Indecisiveness” in Chrysler Bankruptcy Leaves “Everything up in the Air”

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Democracy Now!
May 1, 2009

Ralph Nader: Obama “Indecisiveness” in Chrysler Bankruptcy Leaves “Everything up in the Air”

Chrysler has filed for federal bankruptcy protection, becoming the first major American automaker to do so since 1933. The arrangement came after an intensive round of White House-sponsored negotiations among the Treasury Department, the union and Chrysler’s executives and creditors. We get reaction from consumer advocate Ralph Nader, who says President Obama has failed to assert adequate control over Chrysler’s woes. [includes rush transcript]

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via Ralph Nader: Obama “Indecisiveness” in Chrysler Bankruptcy Leaves “Everything up in the Air”.

Transcript

JUAN GONZALEZ: President Obama forced Chrysler into federal bankruptcy protection on Thursday so it could form an alliance with Italian carmaker Fiat. Chrysler hopes to sell its core assets, including the Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge brands, into a new company that would be owned by the US government, Fiat and the company’s workers. With Thursday’s filing, Chrysler became the first major American automaker to seek bankruptcy protection since Studebaker did so in 1933.

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Is this the end of the age of the automobile? by Harvey Wasserman

Crossposted with permission from The Free Press.

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by Harvey Wasserman
The Free Press
March 9, 2009

As a dominant form of transportation, the automobile is dead. So is GM, which now stands for Gone Mad.

But the larger picture says that the financial crisis now enveloping the world is grounded in the transition from the automobile—and the fossils that fuel it—to a brave renewable world of reborn mass transit and green power.

If GM lives in any form, it must be owned and operated by its workers and the public.

But the larger transition is epic and global, based on a simple structural reality: the passenger car is obsolete. Auto sales have plummeted not merely because of a bad economy, but because the technology no longer makes sense.

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Rachel Maddow Show: Bailout for Auto Workers Forbids Strikes

Dandelion Salad

heathr456

Rachel talks to David Cay Johnston about the bailout doing nothing for those needing help with foreclosures and allowing the banks to get a free ride while preventing the unions from striking and the banks that were supposed to be too large to fail being allowed to combine and get even bigger.

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An Auto Bailout that would Work by Dale Allen Pfeiffer

Bill Moyers Journal: Clinton, Obama, King & Johnston + more (video)

“Free Lunch: How the Wealthiest Americans Enrich Themselves at Govt Expense (& Stick You with the Bill)” (must see video)

PBS: NOW: Income Inequality (video link)

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse 2

An Auto Bailout that would Work by Dale Allen Pfeiffer

by Dale Allen Pfeiffer
featured writer
Dandelion Salad
Dale’s blog post
The Mountain Sentinel
Dec. 25, 2008

After much bickering and sensational threats, the auto industry got their bailout. Of course this bailout is limited in scope and there is still a chance the big three might fold. But for now the auto execs can go on with business as usual, while promising to pare down union pay and benefits until they match nonunion pay. And the UAW is actually going along with this. The auto workers deserve a real union.

The auto unions should be fighting hard to unionize nonunion plants in the United States and around the world. If Barrack Obama would stand behind his word to support strong unions, he would fight the Republicans in Congress to help make this happen. But he will not, and the unions will timidly accept the cuts for the greater good of keeping the auto industries open and keeping their workers employed.

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Senate rejects auto bailout by David Rogers + GOP Willing to Kill the Auto Bailout and the UAW

Dandelion Salad

Updated: added video

by David Rogers
Politico.com
Dec. 11, 2008

A White House-backed bailout for ailing automakers collapsed in the Senate Thursday night, pushing General Motors Corp. closer to almost certain bankruptcy absent a major intervention by the Treasury Department.

The 52-35 roll call fell well short of the 60 needed to cut off debate, and appeared to doom any chance of legislative action until a new Congress convenes in January.

“We’re not going to get to the finish line,” said Majority Leader Harry Reid “I dread looking at Wall Street tomorrow (Friday). It’s not going to be a pleasant sight.”

[…]

via Senate rejects auto bailout – David Rogers – Politico.com.

h/t: CLG

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Updated

Countdown: GOP Willing to Kill the Auto Bailout and the UAW

heathr456

Keith talks to Daniel Gross about the GOP’s plan kill the deal on the auto bailout unless they can micro-manage the labor agreements and the emphasis by the Southern senators to kill off the UAW as a part of this deal.

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Senate to Middle Class: Drop Dead …a message from Michael Moore h/t: CLG

Dennis Kucinich: Our Automotive Industry Is Necessary To National Security + Paul: How Much is This Really Costing!

Automakers would cede control in exchange for $15 billion in aid + video

Hit me Congress, One More Time: Bailing Out the Auto Industry by Walter Brasch

The Economy Sucks and or Collapse 2

Dennis Kucinich: Our Automotive Industry Is Necessary To National Security + Paul: How Much is This Really Costing!

Dandelion Salad

New tag for Dennis Kucinich posts: Kucinich-Dennis J.

New tag for Ron Paul posts: Paul-Ron-MD

C-SPAN
December 10, 2008

http://www.c-span.org/video/?c2942892/clip-house-session (clip)

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Ron Paul: How Much is This Really Costing!

EDUCATIONAL REVOLUTION Continue reading

Automakers would cede control in exchange for $15 billion in aid + video + Bailout stalls

Dandelion Salad

Updated: see below

By David Lightman and Kevin G. Hall
McClatchy Newspapers
Dec. 8, 2008

WASHINGTON — Democratic congressional leaders agreed Monday to push a $15 billion auto-industry bailout plan that would require Detroit’s Big Three to restructure and answer to an overseer appointed by the president.

The plan, which Congress is likely to consider later this week, would give the government authority over major decisions by the automakers. General Motors, Ford and Chrysler would have to report progress to Congress regularly and come up with a long-term restructuring plans by March 31.

[…]

via McClatchy Washington Bureau | 12/08/2008 | Automakers would cede control in exchange for $15 billion in aid.

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Nancy Pelosi & Barney Frank Press Conference (Auto Bailout)

CSPANJUNKIEdotORG

http://cspanjunkie.org/
December 08, 2008 C-SPAN

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$15 billion Detroit bailout stalls over GOP reservations

By David Lightman
McClatchy Newspapers
Dec. 9, 2008

WASHINGTON — Efforts to craft a $15 billion auto-industry rescue plan stalled Tuesday as key Republican lawmakers raised serious questions about the package, but Democrats remained optimistic that they could get an agreement soon.

Democratic congressional leaders are pushing legislation to provide immediate help for General Motors Corp., Chrysler LLC and, potentially, Ford Motor Co., and to create a “car czar” with broad authority over how the money is spent and the companies are revamped.

[…]

via McClatchy Washington Bureau | 12/09/2008 | $15 billion Detroit bailout stalls over GOP reservations.

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Hit me Congress, One More Time: Bailing Out the Auto Industry by Walter Brasch

Obama, Wall Street and the US Automakers by Michael Hudson

Automakers Return to Capitol Hill + Ralph Nader and Medea Benjamin on Obama’s Cabinet

Countdown: Michael Moore on the Auto Bailout + “Matthew Alexander” on Torture

They Auto Know Better: Fueling Anti-Union Fires by Walter Brasch

Hit me Congress, One More Time: Bailing Out the Auto Industry by Walter Brasch

by Walter Brasch
featured writer
Dandelion Salad
www.walterbrasch.com
Dec. 8, 2008

Congress should bend over, dig into the public coffers once again, and give the auto industry everything it wants—even though 61 percent of Americans oppose a bailout, according to a CNN/Opinion Research poll.

A couple of weeks ago, CEOs from GM, Ford, and Chrysler, known collectively as the Big 3, revved up their corporate jets’ engines, dropped in on the Senate, and testified that without a $25 billion bailout western civilization would collapse.

With the nation in a Recession, auto sales have declined to the lowest point since January 1982. Sales are off 47 percent for Ford, 41 percent for GM, and 31 percent for Chrysler from last year. Even sales of major overseas auto manufacturers selling to the American market are down, but not as much as for the Big 3. But, Big 3 market share has plummeted from 70 percent in 1998 to only 53 percent this year, according to Autodata Corp. Equally as important, Consumer Reports has consistently given cars produced by foreign-owned manufacturers higher ratings than American-made cars, although the problem is more attributable to management decisions than problems on the manufacturing line. But, even if Big 3 Management was flawless in their business plans, sales would still be significantly down because of the Recession, partially caused by the sub-prime loan fiasco and the reality that credit is now tight for most Americans.

Congress, which freely handed out more than $700 billion in taxpayer money to financial institutions with fewer morals than the average street walker, now demanded the Big 3 to return with an actual plan. As an afterthought, Congress suggested that the next time executives from GM, Ford, and Chrysler come to the nation’s capital, conspicuous consumption would be frowned up.

As compliant as any corporate “yes man,” the three executives returned, each of them driving a gas-efficient American-built car. Executives from GM and Ford said they planned to sell their jets; Chrysler, owned by Cerberus, a private equity firm, was moot on the issue. Of course, the Big 3 executives should have driven to D.C. the first time, but that’s an issue that six-figure PR executives should have foreseen.

This time, having been properly chastised, the auto execs brought a new proposal to Congress. Instead of a $25 billion bailout, the cost would be $34 billion for loans and credit lines. Apparently, driving a hybrid and eating at roadside diners costs more. And, each of the executives would work for $1 a year. That’s right. The executives who stripped eight-figure income each year from the Big 3 would take a $1 a year token payment if the bailout was dropped into their piggybanks. Naturally, it would be unfair to force myriad 6- and 7-figure income executives below them to sacrifice the family mansion, vacation homes, spa and country club memberships, luxury cars, and private school tuition for their darling upcoming junior executives.

And then the CEOs actually talked. Would they take less money? Perhaps a $14–15 billion “bridge loan” proposed by Democratic leaders and President Bush would get them through the first quarter of 2009, they said, trying to salvage anything. Would they be willing to increase their contracts with American-owned suppliers while decreasing dependence upon foreign-owned suppliers? Their response was as clear as any Bush statement; translated, they said they might possibly consider that request, as long as the stars aligned correctly during the vernal equinox—or some such logic.

Congress has allowed itself to be blackmailed so many times already by banks, investment firms, and an insurance agency that it is hypocritical to bully the auto industry CEOs, and to deny funds to an industry that actually produces a tangible product that is important to all Americans. More important, their product still accounts for a significant part of the workforce.

The national unemployment rate is 6.7 percent, highest in 15 years; the rate is expected to hit about 8 percent in 2009, according to the Wall Street Journal. More significant, if the number of Americans who have been so discouraged by the employment possibilities and are no longer actively looking for full-time work is figured, the percentage rises to about 12.5, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Of about 1.9 million layoffs this year alone, the Big 3 laid off about 140,000, with significantly more anticipated.

Higher unemployment leads to higher housing foreclosures and bankruptcies. It leads not only to depression but also to more health problems, including malnourishment, as Americans cut back on food and medical care. About 46 million Americans don’t have health insurance; millions more who do have insurance provided through their employment can’t afford to get adequate medical care because they can’t afford the deductibles and co-pays.

Corporate America, instead of looking at their own excesses and incompetence, blames workers for the problem. But, the line worker is the one who builds something to the specifications of others but has no input into the decisions that cost the Big 3 their share of the market. For its part, the unions, blamed by almost every executive in America, has gone beyond what should be expected of a union.

The United Auto Workers, which extended major concessions to Chrysler in 1979, agreed to significant concessions in the 2007 contract, including allowing the Big 3 to hire manufacturing line workers at $14–16 an hour, about half of the current employee wages. By any standard, the workers have made far more concessions to keep the auto industry putting along than have the companies themselves.

Nevertheless, a failure by any of the Big 3 would have a severe effect upon several thousand other businesses, including car haulers, suppliers, garages, and dealers. Even the media have been adversely affected. Auto manufacturers are among the leading advertisers in magazines; auto dealers are among the leading advertisers in local daily newspapers. Newspaper advertising is down about 19 percent from last year, according to the Newspaper Association of America; magazine advertising pages are down about 9.5 percent, according to the Publishers Information Bureau. Significant drops in advertising by the Big 3 have contributed to even more media layoffs, including reduced income for all major suppliers, including printers.

Last year, according to data collected by Advertising Age, General Motors, with an advertising budget of $3 billion, was the fourth largest advertiser; Ford, with $2.5 billion, was sixth; Chrysler, with $1.8 billion was thirteenth. However, all three have cut their budgets, with GM eliminating all TV advertising from the Emmys, Academy Awards, and the SuperBowl, and reducing ad spending for all NFL games. GM won’t disclose how much it spent on the Emmys and Academy Awards, but TNS Media Intelligence estimates GM spent $13.5 million just for Oscar night telecast advertising; SuperBowl ads went for about $2.7 million per 30 second spot in 2008; GM had one ad, promoting an SUV hybrid. Although overall TV ad revenue is up from last year, part of that is because of significant spending during the presidential campaign. Lower ad revenue from the automakers and numerous other industries in 2009 will affect programming and the workforce.

With increased unemployment, housing foreclosures, bankruptcies, and lack of adequate health care rising to record levels, a bailout for the Big 3, as distasteful as it seems, is probably the best way to help keep this year-long Recession from going into a Depression. After throwing money at Wall Street, it is far too late for Congress to claim it is looking out for the fiscal interests of the taxpayers, and time to acknowledge that it needs to look after the interests of the workers.

[Walter Brasch and his wife own two American-made automobiles, produced by union labor. He is the author of the recently-published Sinking the Ship of State: The Presidency of George W. Bush, available at amazon.com, bn.com, and numerous independent and chain stores. Dr. Brasch is professor of journalism at Bloomsburg University. You may contact him through his website, www.walterbrasch.com or by e-mail at brasch@bloomu.edu]

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They Auto Know Better: Fueling Anti-Union Fires by Walter Brasch

Obama, Wall Street and the US Automakers by Michael Hudson

Automakers Return to Capitol Hill + Ralph Nader and Medea Benjamin on Obama’s Cabinet

Congressional Hearing: Automotive Industry Bailout

Detroit vs. Wall Street: The Trillion Dollar Class War by Cameron Salisbury

Obama, Wall Street and the US Automakers by Michael Hudson

Dandelion Salad

by Michael Hudson
Global Research, December 7, 2008

Weakening the economy, leaving it even more debt-strapped.

There is a strange double standard in President-elect Obama’s largess with the public purse when it comes to Wall Street’s banks and insurance companies as compared to his more prudent stance toward bailing out the U.S. auto industry. In his December 7, 2008 interview with Meet the Press he set conditions for an auto industry bailout, but said nothing about setting similar conditions for the financial sector. His words regarding Detroit could just as well have been directed at Wall Street. But they were not.

I think that the Big Three U.S. automakers have made repeated strategic mistakes. They have not managed that industry the way they should have. … What we have to do is to provide them with assistance, but that assistance is conditioned on them making significant adjustments. They’re going to have to restructure, and all their stakeholders are going to have to restructure. Labor, management, shareholders, creditors – everybody’s going to recognize that they have-they do not have a sustainable business model right now. And if they expect taxpayers to help in that adjustment process, then they can’t keep on putting off the kinds of changes that they, frankly, should have made 20 or 30 years ago.

Later in the interview he repeated this position:

… if taxpayer money is at stake … we want to make sure that it is conditioned on a auto industry emerging at the end of the process that actually works, that actually functions. … But I’m also concerned that we don’t put 10 or 20 or 30 or whatever billion dollars into an industry, and then, six months to a year later, they come back hat in hand and say, “Give me more.” Taxpayers, I think, are fed up.

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Automakers Return to Capitol Hill + Ralph Nader and Medea Benjamin on Obama’s Cabinet

Dandelion Salad

Updated: added videos ~ DS

Democracy Now!
Dec. 5, 2008

CEOs of Big Three Automakers Return to Capitol Hill to Plead for $34B Federal Bailout

The chief executives of Detroit’s Big Three automakers returned to Capitol Hill yesterday to plead for $34 billion in federal aid to bail out the industry. The company CEOs all drove to Washington in hybrid vehicles after being criticized for flying in for hearings last month in separate private jets. Lawmakers said they were not convinced that the automakers could return to profitability even with a massive infusion of government cash. We speak with longtime consumer advocate Ralph Nader and Wendy Thompson, a retired worker at American Axle in Detroit and the former president of UAW Local 235. [includes rush transcript]

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via Democracy Now! | CEOs of Big Three Automakers Return to Capitol Hill to Plead for $34B Federal Bailout.

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Congressional Hearing: Automotive Industry Bailout

Dandelion Salad

CSPAN Junkie
December 04, 2008

C-SPAN

A hearing was held on requests from Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors for federal financial assistance to the domestic automotive industry. Executives from the auto companies requested a total of $34 billion in aid, an increase from the previous request of $25 billion which was rejected by congressional leaders without a plan to revitalize the industry.

via Congressional Hearing: Automotive Industry Bailout at CSPAN Junkie. (watch video)

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Countdown: Michael Moore on the Auto Bailout + “Matthew Alexander” on Torture

Detroit vs. Wall Street: The Trillion Dollar Class War by Cameron Salisbury

Nancy Pelosi Response by Plans Submitted to Congress by Automakers

Making Smarter Cars Instead of Stupid Decisions by William Cox

Countdown: Michael Moore on the Auto Bailout + “Matthew Alexander” on Torture

Dandelion Salad

heathr456

Keith talks to Michael Moore about the proposed bailout of the auto industry and how it should be handled.

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“Matthew Alexander” on Torture

Keith talks to author “Matthew Alexander” about which interrogation techniques work and why we should not be torturing prisoners.

Bushed!

Tonight’s: Society’s Loss is the Military’s Gain-Gate, Torture by Proxy-Gate and Our Attorney General is not Rational-Gate.

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Detroit vs. Wall Street: The Trillion Dollar Class War by Cameron Salisbury

Nancy Pelosi Response by Plans Submitted to Congress by Automakers

Making Smarter Cars Instead of Stupid Decisions by William Cox

They Auto Know Better: Fueling Anti-Union Fires by Walter Brasch

Dr. J.’s Commentary: Why the Republicans Want to Kill GM

Countdown: Bushed! Torture-Gate + India and the Bush Doctrine

Torture

Crisis and Opportunity by Ralph Nader

Dandelion Salad

by Ralph Nader
The Nader Page
Dec. 3, 2008

In ancient China, the character for “crisis” was associated with “opportunity.” This month Congress will be faced with both challenges from General Motors, Ford and Chrysler, whose CEOS are begging for a very rapid $34 billion in emergency government loans.

The three auto giants have few cards to play other than the domino effect on the economy, should they collapse into bankruptcy and liquidation. Once Congress signals that, on behalf of its sullen taxpayers, going into this abyss will not happen, our national legislature will hold all the cards.

So if Congress and George W. Bush agree to have Uncle Sam bail out the auto bosses and their tanking companies, important reforms and models can emerge from this multi-faceted mega rescue.

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Detroit vs. Wall Street: The Trillion Dollar Class War by Cameron Salisbury

Detroit vs. Wall Street: The Trillion Dollar Class War by Cameron Salisbury

by Cameron Salisbury
featured writer
Dandelion Salad
Opedinfo.com

If anyone doubted that a class war is in progress, hidden beneath a variety of euphemisms, like ‘bail out’, ‘downsizing,’ ‘outsourcing’ and ‘NAFTA’, their doubts can now be given the decent burial that they deserve.  There has been no more blatant act of class antagonism in recent memory than the apparent willingness of Congress and Wall Street’s appointed grifter, Henry Paulson, to let a major part of the American manufacturing sector die.

The difference between a diffident Congress respectfully requesting a teensy bit more information before handing Henry The-Sky –Is-Falling Paulson a $700 billion authorization, in record time and with no strings attached, stands in stark contrast to the hostility and derision directed at Detroit’s auto executives, who are responsible for actually making something useful and who are requesting a $34 billion guaranteed loan to help get them through the harshest economy in memory.  An economy in freefall, by the way, that is the direct and immediate consequence of Wall Street and its Washington, D.C., enablers.

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