The leading source for credible citizen reporting

Report Your News
Take the tour...

Congress Sends Detroit Execs Back — With Homework

By: arjun send a private message
Washougal : WA : USA | about 1 year ago  
Views: 1,654
  • Congress and the Big 3
    Congress and the Big 3
    Posted by: hardtalk
    Cartoon by John Cole
Congress and the Big 3

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif, second from left, talks during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington to discuss the auto industry bailout.

Faced with the choice of bailing out the ailing auto industry or letting it fail, Congress picked a brave third option: procrastination. Considering the mixed messages Capitol Hill sent on Thursday, that seemed the only appropriate approach. First, news spread midday that a group of bipartisan lawmakers had reached an agreement to provide Detroit with an infusion of $25 billion, with a victory press conference to be held at 2:30 p.m. Then, abruptly, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate majority leader Harry Reid cut the negotiators off at the pass by holding a hastily called press conference of their own in the same Senate room at 2:00 p.m. At that point, the Democratic leaders announced that they would not bring up the agreement for a vote - yet. "What kind of a message do we send to the American people by having a bunch of failed votes here? We do not have the votes," Reid railed.

From there, Reid and Pelosi detailed a series of hoops they expect the automakers to jump through to qualify for bridge loans from Congress. Ford, General Motors and Chrysler must present business plans to the House and Senate Banking Committees no later than Dec. 2. As part of that presentation, they must prove that, in the long run, they are "viable" companies that not only can repay whatever loans they receive but also can demonstrate that they won't need to come back and ask for more money. The two committees will hold hearings to vet the plans. If the plans are approved, Reid and Pelosi say they are willing to reconvene both chambers of Congress the week of Dec. 8 to pass a bailout. "Yes, we're kicking the can down the road, because that will give us the opportunity to do something positive. But that will only happen if they get their act together," Reid told reporters on Capitol Hill on Thursday. (See the 50 worst cars of all time.)

Kicking the can down the road, however, isn't the kind of clarity Wall Street is looking for in these dire economic times. Coming a day after the Big Three CEOs' pleas on Capitol Hill dragged down the markets, Congress's muddled maneuvers on Thursday only made investors more anxious, pushing the Dow Jones down another 400-plus points and the broader S&P 500 index to an 11-year low.

For weeks now, the auto manufacturers, led by GM, have been warning that they are on the brink of bankruptcy. And they insist that in the current climate, without billions of dollars from Washington, bankruptcy would mean total liquidation, not the restructuring that many experts argue is the only real way to fix the industry. Given the complex, interdependent system of auto-parts suppliers, analysts warn that the loss of one of the Big Three could take down the entire sector - and with it some 2.5 million U.S. jobs - in a cascade effect.

But lawmakers, showing signs of bailout fatigue after the $700 billion financial-crisis package passed in September, have been left largely unimpressed by Detroit's cries for help. All week long, Senators and Representatives from both parties have lamented the decades of bad management that have put the auto industry in its current predicament: investing in SUVs when the rest of the world, eyeing the future oil crunch, was betting on smaller, more fuel-efficient cars; spending millions lobbying Congress to avoid regulation that would force tougher environmental standards; and giving its union unsustainably generous deals on salary and benefits that hobbled its ability to compete with Japanese and European carmakers. And the answers to these criticisms from the Big Three CEOs at two hearings, one before each chamber, went so badly this week that lawmakers cited their performances as reason not to give them any money.

source:www.times.com

  • Print
  • Share:
  • Share
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Stumbleupon

Related Allvoices Contributions

News Stories
 
  • News Source: Christian Science Monitor | about 1 year ago
    Washington Even before taking office, President-elect Barack Obama is becoming an essential player in decisionmaking on Capitol Hill. From the pre-Thanksgiving “pardon” of Sen. Joseph Lieberman (I) of Connecticut to the shape of an economic...
  • News Source: Money Morning | about 1 year ago
    Running out of cash and in danger of collapse, General Motors Corp. ( GM ) will try to negotiate for new union work rules and seek to cut debt levels in attempt to boost its chances of securing crucial federal loans. GM is also considering dropping...
  • News Source: CNN | about 1 year ago
    Given the crisis hitting the industry, it sounds about as realistic as flying cars...U.S. automakers will start making money again before they'll agree to even have a vote on the $25 billion federal loan package the industry is seeking. Many critics...
  • News Source: Xtra News | about 1 year ago
    President-elect Barack Obama Monday said the US auto industry was too vital to disappear but vowed no " blank check " for a government bailout without long- term changes from the Detroit manufacturers. "We can't allow the auto industry simply to...
  • News Source: CNN | about 1 year ago
    The heads of the Big Three automakers had to subject themselves to two days of Congressional grilling last week while they begged for a $25 billion loan. And what did General Motors ( GM , Fortune 500 ), Ford ( F , Fortune 500 ) and Chrysler get?...
  • News Source: Canadian Free Press | about 1 year ago
    Particularly, the United Auto Worker’s Union, which has negotiated unemployment for 250,000 workers and perhaps millions more in ancillary businesses. Sending even a single penny of taxpayer money to Detroit would be an act of utter foolishness...
Blogs
 >
Images
 >
 
Videos
 >
 
Reported by arjun
Report Your News Got a similar story?
Add it to the network!

Or add related content to this report

Cell phones Cell phones use report code: @1842460

Most Popular Reports

Related Allvoices Reports

Related People

Contributions

Help and Accounts


Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use Agreement and Privacy Policy.

© Allvoices, Inc 2008-2009. All rights reserved.