By

David Morgan /

CBS News/ June 3, 2011, 11:58 AM

Romney: Bankruptcy, not bailouts, saved Detroit

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said Friday the turnaround by Chrysler and General Motors was thanks to their being taken into bankruptcy court, not the bailout dollars that were given the automakers by the Bush and Obama administrations.

The former Massachusetts governor had written in a November 2008 New York Times Op-ed titled "Let Detroit Go Bankrupt," that automakers needed a managed bankruptcy, not a bailout check. "If General Motors, Ford and Chrysler get the bailout that their chief executives asked for yesterday, you can kiss the American automotive industry goodbye," he wrote.

In 2009 Romney told Fox News that the U.S. government becoming a majority stakeholder in General Motors represented "a very, very sad circumstance for this country ... it's really tragic in a lot of respects."

Today, with the auto industry on the rebound - 115,000 jobs added, and $5.1 billion paid back to the federal government this week by Chrysler - Romney said Detroit's resurgence is because President Obama took his advice.

Schieffer: Romney must prove he's on the right

On CBS' "The Early Show" anchor Erica Hill asked Romney if he was wrong in the case of automakers who received government bailouts.

"I think you're misunderstanding the word 'bankrupt,'" Romney replied. "It's not liquidation of an enterprise, but allowing them to go to the bankruptcy court to reorganize and come out stronger. That's what happened.

"When I wrote that the auto industry was asking for a bailout, we are unwise to send billions of dollars [to companies], instead - finally - the president recognized I was right, and finally took the company, in the case at General Motors, the company finally went through bankruptcy and went through a managed bankruptcy, came out of bankruptcy and is now recovering.

"So, look, the right process for an enterprise in trouble is not to be given free money from the taxpayers with a bailout, but instead go through a bankruptcy process, reorganize debts, and reduce costs and come out stronger. "

"The company actually had to go through bankruptcy before that bailout?" Hill asked.

"Yeah, that's exactly what I said. The headline you read which said 'Let Detroit Go Bankrupt' points out that those companies needed to go through bankruptcy to shed those costs," Romney said. "And the federal government put in, I think, $17 billion into those companies before they finally recognized, 'Yeah, they need to go bankrupt, go through that process, so that they're able to get rid of excess costs.'"

[Last week a Romney spokesperson told The New York Times that the president's plan to save U.S. automakers was modeled after Romney's 2008 op-ed. "Mitt Romney had the idea first," said Eric Fehrnstrom. "You have to acknowledge that. He was advocating for a course of action that eventually the Obama administration adopted."]

CBS News' Erica Hill said to Romney, "You called the whole process 'tragic' and said it was 'a sad circumstance for the country.' Yet it's turned out fairly positive, a lot of folks would say, especially in Detroit."

"Erica, I think you're misunderstanding. What I wrote early on was absolutely right. I said these companies shouldn't be given money up-front by the federal government - like they were, by the way, both by President Bush and President Obama," Romney said. "Instead they should go through a bankruptcy process and if they did, they could come out stronger and well. And that's precisely what ultimately happened.

"So I'm very proud of the fact that, in fact, we called it like it was, and that is these companies needed to go through a bankruptcy process, come out through bankruptcy, go back to work, get jobs for the people who had would otherwise have lost jobs if these companies just trailed on down.

"And by the way, we could have saved billions of dollars had we moved to bankruptcy from the very beginning."

Also appearing on "The Early Show," Florida Democratic Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz said that Romney was engaging in "revisionist history."

She said the turnaround by Detroit was due to government bailout dollars and bankruptcy combined. "I think the auto industry executives would say they couldn't have gotten through to the other side and been profitable without both," Wasserman Schultz said, "so I'm not really sure what we need Gov. Romney for."

When asked by Hill why the former Massachusetts governor - who ran for but lost the GOP nomination in 2008 - is the right candidate for Republicans now, Romney said, "You know, back in 2008 the issue that really motivated our voters at the primary time was Iraq - whether the surge would work - and John McCain very wisely made that the centerpiece of his campaign. That was in his wheelhouse. He did a great job, but this year at this time the American people recognize that what's happening in the economy is the most important thing that America faces."

While voters told a CBS News poll in December 2007 that the war in Iraq was the most important issue (25 percent) compared to the economy (13 percent), those issues flipped in January 2008, in a poll taken just before the New Hampshire primary, with the economy the leading issue over Iraq, 23 percent to 22 percent. A February 3, 2008 CBS News poll released prior to Super Tuesday said voters called the economy and jobs the most important problem facing the country (38 percent) compared to the war in Iraq (21 percent).

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • David Morgan

    David Morgan is a senior editor at CBSNews.com and cbssundaymorning.com.

43 Comments Add a Comment
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Jack496 says:
Make no mistake, Ford got a lot of free money from the US Government something like in the tune of 15 billion dollars. Google it and find out.
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Jack496 says:
I used to think Romney was smart. If he can not come out with an honest assessment of what really saved Detroit, he doesn't deserve my volt. He is not so smart in no-way would I ever vote for him for any position.
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buckfush500 says:
If Romney can get people to believe this one, then instead of running for president, he should go into the bridge selling business.
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34sender says:
Romney is entitled to his opinion, but not his own facts.

He is making a mistake right now, he really needs to be playing with the fire burning across his aspirations that is coming from the political right (GOP and tea party groups).

Instead, he is trying to use some very tired talking points with Obama. Meanwhile, over 80% of the American people are seeing the results of our slow, but steady economic recovery.

I have investments, I am not bummed out -- the market dropped, but it does that, it'll be back (I think this ridiculous debt ceiling game is more responsible than anything else and that is the GOP's game!). I am sooooo much better than before Obama was elected. However I do not think he is responsible for all the good news any more than to be blamed for all the bad news. You see, I have common sense.
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noloyalisti says:
Romney is a Republicon so by definition whatever he says is exactly the opposite (think Clean Skies, Healthy Forest, No Child Left Behind). Isn't he the bozo who was for Obamacare before he was against it? And part of the Republicon conspiracy to privatize America for corporate profits (that worked perfectly by the way).
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sjc_1 says:
To make that work, you have to have some entity back the operation while it goes THROUGH bankruptcy. That entity was the U.S. Treasury and it worked. Mitt can just keep blowing hot air, he looks like more of a fool all the time.
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justme2012 replies:
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Really? Who backs the millions of "too small to save" businesses that go bankrupt????????

No Romney is correct. Obama is a FAILURE
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Birdman04 says:
He is not a viable candidate and has credibility issues. Next batter please. When is someone worthy from either side going to step forward to lead our nation?
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smirk5 says:
So, all you Cons that were mad about bailing out Detroit were wrong according to Romney. It was bankruptcy and it was good. And, you'll support his story on this. Funny stuff.
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starving1968-3 says:
by your-one-king June 3, 2011 1:49 PM EDT
Romney tells it like it is.






Romney tells it like he wants it to be heard. Not like it is:

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/06/03/politics/main20068571.shtml
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infantryman1968 says:
The White House Wednesday touted a resurgent U.S. auto industry as justification for a massive government auto bailout but also admitted taxpayers may still be on the hook for as much as $14 billion in losses from the deal.


LOL!

Bill the Unions. The Bailouts were about buying their votes.
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starving1968-3 replies:
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Right.

It wasn't about preventing hundreds of businesses going under, leaving millions unemployed.

It was about buying votes.

Congratulations on celebrating your 5th birthday.
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