By on December 16, 2008

“If we’re going to use taxpayer financing to assist the automakers, all stakeholders are going to have to come to the table and be willing to show that they are capable and willing to make really tough decisions about the way forward,” White House Spokesperson Dana Perino said today. “We’re not going to be rushed into it just because there’s pressure from the media… on us to do something rash.” Yeah, hurry up and do something rash, will ya? “We need them to become viable, competitive firms in the future. And in order to do that, concessions are going to have to be made by stakeholders.” Not to mention everything else.

Get the latest TTAC e-Newsletter!

Recommended

30 Comments on “Bailout Watch 292: The White House Uses the “I” Word...”


  • avatar
    PeteMoran

    Is the language changing already?

  • avatar
    50merc

    Man, the car in that picture sure needs a wheel alignment.

  • avatar
    IOtheworldaliving

    If the White House wants to meet with all the parties again for negotiations I hope they do so by videoconference rather than in person. There seems to be no optimal mode of transportation for these people at this time.

  • avatar
    crackers

    This post and a previous post describing the White House Staff poring over financials makes me hopeful that if a bailout occurs, it will have very tough and very necessary conditions attached to it.

  • avatar

    I honestly have no idea what the “I” word is.

    What does piss me off however is that all the other governments told their auto makers they would assist them – since ALL OF THEM are hurting right now, yet, America is the only one that makes their major mass producer JUMP THROUGH HOOPS.

    No wonder why other countries are producing our stuff (and consequently poisoning us with lead paint) while our politicians dick around. We’ve been betrayed at the highest level by what Pat Bucchanan has nicknamed “the Toyota Republicans”

  • avatar
    mel23

    I don’t trust these bastards, the Bush bunch, to do anything constructive. There’s a blurb about every third day in the WSJ about them pushing through some change to the regs to allow more drilling or whatever on public land, to make it easier to ignore endangered species protection, etc. They’ve screwed up everything they’ve touched, so how about getting the hell out of town without doing more harm. They refuse to deal with any issue on objective merits when they can substitute dogma. Education, public health, it doesn’t matter. There must surely be some way to bring religion into this thing.

  • avatar
    psarhjinian

    No wonder why other countries are producing our stuff (and consequently poisoning us with lead paint) while our politicians dick around. We’ve been betrayed at the highest level by what Pat Bucchanan has nicknamed “the Toyota Republicans”

    It’s not that simple.

    America has a pathological fear of government involvement in industry. That’s a big part of it, despite that American government and industry really are quite intertwined anyway, just in a nefarious, back-room fashion, rather than overtly as in, say, Germany or Japan. This results in a lot of indirect, dirty, and slow work by lobbyists, rather than quick, decisive action.

    The other issue is a distinct lack of political diversity. In most other countries, there’s a whole spectrum of parties and ideologies, and they’re forced to cooperate to get anything done, or advance any part of their agenda. It’s very hard to be partisan when the range of parties spans that gamut from vertiable neo-Nazis to Marxist-Leninists, with representation from everyone in-between.

    In the US**, it’s like football: two teams, one winner.

    Because there’s only two teams, a whole lot of pandering and showboating happens. It’s not quite such an issue in Congress, where local interests get a chance, but in the Senate and White House you’re more or less stuck with petty partisan sniping. That both teams represent, effectively, the right wing, doesn’t help any. They’re reduced to petty squabbling and soundbites, rather than real differences, because truthfully there aren’t any.

    Parties are a very, very bad thing. That they’re practically institutionalized in the US has made it worse: there are no valid options anymore: if you want to be elected, you need the backing of one of the two machines. To do that, you need to participate in the show.

    ** (and Canada, the US and Australia, to a much lesser degree)

  • avatar
    bluecon

    The government could bring over a bunch of paople from Fannie Mae and Freddie mac to run the auto companies. Or maybe the Post office or the license bureau has some spare people.

    Government cars

    Lada
    Trabant
    Yugo
    Skoda

    Why do I think the government running the auto companies is a bad idea?

  • avatar
    PeteMoran

    @ Flashpoint

    ‘I’ as in IF they bailout GM/Chrysler.

    The difference with other countries being prepared to allocate some monies for their auto companies, or indeed any organisation that needs help, is that they are otherwise fundamentally sound businesses.

  • avatar
    no_slushbox

    Flashpoint:

    Who has gotten bailed out? The only foreign bailouts I’ve heard of are for subsidiaries of the big-3.

    It’s the same Republicans that opposed the financial bailout that are opposing the auto bailout. That they have some transplants in their states is just a convenient way to claim that they are biased, instead of just smart enough to realize that the big-3 are failed, and not salvageable with some mislabeled “loans”.

    If we are going to label politicians with auto company names the Toyota Republicans, in this case, are much more correct than the British Leyland Republicans and Democrats.

    I agree that the jumping through hoops should stop. There is no such thing as a non-bankruptcy bankruptcy. Hopefully the Treasury will let them go Chapter 11 in some managed way. The Wall Street Journal has reported a study that a number of people would buy from automakers in Chapter 11 if there was government backing. If the Chapter 11s do turn into Chapter 7s it’s better than the alternative of endless bailouts.

  • avatar
    motron

    @ no_slushbox:

    It’s the same Republicans that opposed the financial bailout that are opposing the auto bailout.

    18 Republican Senators voted in favor of the $700 billion bank bailout, but against the $14 billion auto industry loan. They are:

    Bob Bennett, R-UT
    Richard Burr, R-NC
    Saxby Chambliss, R-GA
    Tom Coburn, R-OK
    Norm Coleman, R-MN
    Bob Corker, R-TN
    John Ensign, R-NV
    Chuck Grassley, R-IA
    Judd Gregg, R-NH
    Orrin Hatch, R-UT
    Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-TX
    Johnny Isakson, R-GA
    John Kyl, R-AZ
    Mel Martinez, R-FL
    John McCain, R-AZ
    Mitch McConnell, R-KY
    Lisa Murkowski, R-AK
    John Thune, R-SD

  • avatar
    maniceightball

    There seems to be no optimal mode of transportation for these people at this time.

    If they’re so concerned about PR, they should just all bandy together and grab a small exclusive first-class flight in a smaller commercial jet. I don’t understand what the big deal is surrounding all this travel nonsense.

    Regarding the article, I think it’s all just talk. When has the White House ever really held anyone accountable?

  • avatar
    akitadog

    The camber of that car’s wheels is off slightly.

  • avatar
    psarhjinian

    Why do I think the government running the auto companies is a bad idea?

    Despite the resolute inability of ideologues on both sides of the spectrum to see this, there’s a big difference between running and cooperating with.

    I don’t think you’d be stretching the truth to say the Volkswagen, Hyundai or Toyota benefit from a cooperative relationship with the respective home-market governments.

  • avatar
    BenFarmer

    It’s barely possible that the Bushies are actually playing it smart. Smart would be holding out the possibility of a bailout and negotiating and studying while the industry cuts costs to the bone on a ‘temporary’ basis to stay afloat until the bailout comes. String it out until after the Christmas selling season gets over so that auto bankruptcies don’t disrupt the Christmas retail sales season any more than the prospect of bankruptcy already has.

    By late December-maybe the 27th or 28th, with bankruptcy days away, GM, Chrysler and the UAW would be in a far weaker bargaining position than they are now, and would probably give up more and accept less for it. That’s a risky game, but the possibility of a federal bailout probably makes a forced bankruptcy less likely. If GM or Chrysler owe you money, why force a bankruptcy where you get maybe 15% of what the big 1.8 owe them when there is the prospect of a bailout that gives you 100%?

    I don’t think Bush and company are subtle enough to play that game, but it is possible. One thought though: The new, much more Democratic congress will take over January 3, with actual business starting Jan 4. If GM and Chrysler can make it until then they will probably face a much more favorable congress, though a lot of Democrats at the greener end of the party have not forgiven GM for “killing the electric car’.

  • avatar
    IOtheworldaliving

    @maniceeightball: You are making way too much sense.

    Ostensibly, you can’t put them all on 1 plane because if the plane crashes, the loss of all that leadership talent at once could have, you know, a catastrophic effect on the entire industry.

  • avatar
    jkross22

    @Flashpoint:

    Betrayal is a strong word to describe resistance to giving money to 3 companies who betrayed the trust of their customers…. companies whose leaders haven’t had the intestinal fortitude to make the really tough choices to avoid getting into the predicament they’re now in.

  • avatar
    dgduris

    Save us Bawney Fwank!

    Pwease save us!

  • avatar
    mtypex

    That car is no more. It has ceased to live!

    … but it does look like something out of Monty Python’s Flying Circus.

  • avatar
    Robert Schwartz

    all stakeholders are going to have to come to the table and be willing to show that they are capable and willing to make really tough decisions about the way forward,” White House Spokesperson Dana Perino said today. … “We need them to become viable, competitive firms in the future. And in order to do that, concessions are going to have to be made by stakeholders.”

    That is a real basic definition of a Chapter 11. This is the best news I have had all day.

  • avatar
    Gardiner Westbound

    Canada agreed to contribute an amount equal to 20-percent of the U.S. bailout representing its share of North American auto production.

    Is Mexico contributing anything?

  • avatar
    windswords

    motron,

    Ten of the eighteen senators in your list are not from southern states. It’s not accurate to say that it was only southern state Republican senators who voted against the bailout. I’m not saying that you said that, but I’ve heard that repeated a lot in the blogashpere. It would be accurate to say that the southern senators were leading the opposition to the bailout.

  • avatar
    RetardedSparks

    That car actually has LESS negative camber than some slammed Civics I’ve seen.

  • avatar
    Caffiend

    The “I” Word?

    Insolvent?

    Idiots?

    Imbiciles?

  • avatar
    nonce

    If they’re so concerned about PR, they should just all bandy together and grab a small exclusive first-class flight in a smaller commercial jet. I don’t understand what the big deal is surrounding all this travel nonsense.

    Because, as someone said in another thread, you must properly supplicate when you go before the king.

    Me, were I the Congressman talking to Chrysler? I would humiliate them publicly for presenting a plan that no one had proofread, not for their mode of transportation.

  • avatar
    Robert Frankfurter

    A notable opinion on the benefit of letting D3 disappear and why this is very “american” and not old fashioned “european” read here:

    http://iht.com/articles/2008/12/17/opinion/edcohen.php

    Dont let yourself being distracted by the Title:
    “Roger Cohen: Pan Am dies, America lives”

  • avatar
    no_slushbox

    On the illegality of using TARP funds:

    http://www.heritage.org/Research/Economy/wm2170.cfm

  • avatar
    no_slushbox

    Also:
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122939117718809261.html

  • avatar
    mykeliam

    In the WSJ article, he mentions quite correctly, that the UAW views bankruptcy as the kiss of death. Of course they would because bk would wipe out all of their contracts. The UAW would have to start from square one negotiating contracts. Ron would lose his pension! Cause the workers might not certify the union to be in the big 2.8 shops.

  • avatar
    charly

    Stringing GM along until Obama would lead to GM selling the core of General Motors, Opel, and its profitable Asian part, Daewoo. GM wouldn’t be an important company in the world anymore.

Read all comments

Back to TopLeave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Recent Comments

  • Lou_BC: @Carlson Fan – My ’68 has 2.75:1 rear end. It buries the speedo needle. It came stock with the...
  • theflyersfan: Inside the Chicago Loop and up Lakeshore Drive rivals any great city in the world. The beauty of the...
  • A Scientist: When I was a teenager in the mid 90’s you could have one of these rolling s-boxes for a case of...
  • Mike Beranek: You should expand your knowledge base, clearly it’s insufficient. The race isn’t in...
  • Mike Beranek: ^^THIS^^ Chicago is FOX’s whipping boy because it makes Illinois a progressive bastion in the...

New Car Research

Get a Free Dealer Quote

Who We Are

  • Adam Tonge
  • Bozi Tatarevic
  • Corey Lewis
  • Jo Borras
  • Mark Baruth
  • Ronnie Schreiber