Nov. 11, 2008
Obama Asks Bush To Back Aid To Automakers
Washington Post: President-Elect Pushes New Stimulus Plan During White House Meeting
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Play CBS Video Video Obama's White House Welcome Barack Obama met with President Bush in the Oval Office to begin a smooth transition of power while Michelle Obama met with Mrs. Bush and toured Washington, D.C. schools.
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Video Obama's Reality Check President-elect Barack Obama made some expensive promises on the campaign trail. With the federal budget collapsing, Obama must now decide what steps to take next. Wyatt Andrews reports.
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Video Obama's White House Welcome "Breaking News": President Bush and his wife, Laura, welcome President-elect Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, to the White House. Katie Couric reports.
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President-elect Obama and President Bush stand together on the West Wing Colonnade of the White House in Washington, Monday, Nov. 10, 2008. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
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Timeline Financial Meltdown Track major events that lead to one of the most tumultuous times in Wall Street's history.
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Photo Essay First Visit The Obamas get personal tour of White House from the Bushes.
President-elect Barack Obama yesterday urged President Bush to support immediate aid for struggling automakers and back a new stimulus package, even as congressional Democrats began drafting legislation to give the Detroit automakers quick access to $25 billion by adding them to the Treasury Department's $700 billion economic rescue program.
Bush, speaking privately to Obama during their first Oval Office meeting, repeated his administration's stand that he might support quick action on those bills if Democratic leaders drop their opposition to a Colombia trade agreement that Bush supports, according to people familiar with the discussions.
The discussions raised the stakes for a lame-duck session of Congress that could begin next week and came as fears about General Motors' financial condition yesterday pushed the company's stock price to its lowest level in about 60 years. Obama said last week that passage of the economic stimulus package and help for American car companies are his top priorities. The Bush administration has steadfastly pushed for trade deals before he leaves office.
Congress could consider the auto measure as soon as next week, when lawmakers are scheduled to return to Washington. Yesterday, in an urgent bipartisan appeal, all 15 House members and both senators from Michigan sent a letter asking the Bush administration to include the auto industry in the Treasury program on its own initiative or to work with Congress to modify the program.
"There's an urgent crisis. It's a national issue. If the administration won't act, we'll have to. But they should act," said Rep. Sander M. Levin (D-Mich.).
The entire auto industry is suffering these days, but GM has been particularly hard hit as sales have slowed and credit has tightened. Once the world's largest automaker, the company said yesterday that it was in danger of running out of cash next year. The company is taking a series of steps to conserve cash, including cutting production and laying off 5,500 more factory workers. Yet one closely followed Deutsche Bank analyst cut his forecast on GM's share price to zero, saying that even if GM manages to avert bankruptcy, "we believe that the company's future path is likely to be bankruptcy-like."
The gloomy assessment and others like it helped knock down GM's shares by nearly 23 percent, to $3.36.
So far, administration officials have resisted calls to include the Detroit automakers in the Treasury's bailout program, which was conceived to stabilize banks and other financial institutions reeling from the global credit crisis. Opening the program to the auto industry would expand the government's role in private enterprise far beyond the banking sector, and analysts warn that it could prompt a long line of companies from other industries to show up in Washington with their hands out.
Administration officials have pointed instead to $25 billion in low-interest loans recently approved by Congress as a source of quick help for the car companies. Yesterday, White House press secretary Dana Perino told reporters that the White House would be open to legislation that removes bureaucratic roadblocks slowing the release of that money.
"Congress is going to come back into town next week," Perino said. "If it wants to do anything in addition for the automakers, we'll certainly listen to ideas they have on how to accelerate the loans to viable companies."
Democrats said the loan program is intended to provide long-term assistance to the car companies to retool their factories to produce more fuel-efficient vehicles. They said it was not designed to provide urgent relief from a crisis in consumer confidence that has pushed auto sales to their lowest level in two decades.
"GM has estimated maybe they'd get a billion or two at most next year" from the previously approved loan program, Levin said. "It wouldn't provide for the infusion of capital that's absolutely necessary for them to bridge to the future."
Democrats want the Bush administration to approve an additional $25 billion in loans from the Treasury program, bringing total federal assistance to the car companies to $50 billion. In a letter sent yesterday to Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr., Levin and other Michigan lawmakers urged Paulson "in the strongest possible terms to use your authority under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA) or other statutes to immediately address a significant and systemic threat to the U.S. economy and provide emergency assistance to the domestic automobile industry."
Given that one of every 10 U.S. jobs depends in some way on the auto industry, the letter says, helping Detroit is "well within the broad mandate of the Treasury Department to promote stable economic growth. Given the urgency of the situation, we ask that you work with us in the coming days to provide immediate loan support to the domestic auto industry, including, if necessary," by amending the emergency stabilization act.
The letter followed a similar entreaty to Paulson over the weekend by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and House Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.).
Amending the Treasury program would require action by both chambers of Congress. As of yesterday, Senate leaders planned to convene Nov. 17, but House leaders had yet to decide whether to summon lawmakers back to work. Although most House members will be in Washington next week to choose the leadership for the next Congress, retiring members and those who lost their seats on election night will not return unless Pelosi calls them back.
House leaders have said they are unlikely to convene the House for legislative business unless the Bush administration agrees to negotiate a spending package to revive the broader economy. As of yesterday, although the two sides continued to talk, there was no deal. But if the Senate approves a $61 billion economic stimulus package that the House passed in September, the House might return to work on that legislation, creating an opportunity to help the automakers.
Michigan lawmakers from both parties said failure to act would be devastating, not only to the car companies but also to the nation.
"Our nation's leaders must not turn a deaf ear toward helping the nation's automakers," Rep. Fred Upton (R-Mich.), co-chairman of the Congressional Auto Caucus, said in a written statement. "We can either stand by and do nothing, watching tens of thousands of jobs in Michigan and Middle America evaporate, or we can meet our challenges head on."
Given the vast sums of money the Bush administration has provided to Wall Street, including a rapidly growing bailout for insurance giant American International Group, Levin said the administration had no excuse not to act.
"How much are we giving AIG? $150 billion? And we're talking about $25 billion for what has been the major industry of this country," Levin said. "If there's a will, there's a way. So now it's up to the administration to respond. If they don't, we'll act."
Staff writer Kendra Marr contributed to this report.
By Lori Montgomery and Michael D. Shear
© 2008 The Washington Post Company


Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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Posted by indiana891 at 03:09 PM : Nov 11, 2008
Because it is the democrat way. Pay people to make pretend they are working.
Dear Fedup-w-pols, during my 30 plus years working I was a job steward and managemnt. Have you ever worked a repetative job? Its he most boring, hardest work you can imagine. However, as managemnt, unions needs to be realistic with wants. I once saw a business close because the union was unrealistic. How can that be productive to the worker or management? Unions are needed just as balance of power in government. If either gets the upperhand then absolute power will distroy absolutely. From a long line of coal miners, steel workers and relatives who went to work at 8 years old in tile factories and coal mines--unions were a god send. What is needed is compromise and working together to get things done. Together we win. Give them aid but attach fiscal requirements and demand they compromise.
Posted by melchg at 01:20 PM
No, it creates more wealth for global corporations. When the American worker tries to compete with the Chinese worker, the standard of living of the American worker will go down. It''s not rocket science.
We have shipped just about all our manufacturing base overseas, leaving us dangerously dependent on imports for the most basic things. Do global corporations care about that? Of course not. Global corporations don''t want borders and want the minimum of regulations and taxation. This is the "New World Order" that we have been moving towards for some time.
Posted by Xlib at 11:44 AM : Nov 11, 2008
lolll...and you should thank your lucky stars, too.
For I can see certain advantages to the strong taking what they will...like in the French Revolution, where they grabbed everybody who had manipulated themselves into positions of power and wealth, took what they had away from them, and then chopped their heads off.
Biggest rip off you''ll ever invest in, in your life. An American made car. They have the technology to make these things run for 20 years, but they don''t, so they can grab your money, over and over and over.
The only good thing is I am sure they will hold his feet to the fire But he still wont have the guts cause who could blame him hes already a full fled neo con owned by the corps a man of the Neo Elite is not a man for the many
Yea, let''''s talk about Bush.
Posted by Xlib at 11:40 AM : Nov 11, 2008"
You mean predatory lending started in August of 2008 ? And from 2006 to now our internal debt risen from 5.7 trillions to 11.4 trillions ?
Just imagine a democratic president asking republican congress a 700 billions for bail out what would have happened and what all these so called conservatives could have called that.
Do you mean to say we had a very lean government from the past 8 years ?
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