April 17, 2009 4:01 PM

With Bailout, Bush Hands Car Keys To Obama

(CBS/AP)  President Bush's $17 billion lifeline to General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC means neither company will perish while he occupies the White House, yet leaves the ultimate fate of the once-proud auto industry up to the incoming Obama administration.

Little more than a month from leaving office, Mr. Bush framed his rescue as "a step that we wish were not necessary," but one that saved the country from a disastrous economic blow.

It was also one that looked past public opposition, included a key concession of his own and spared a gridlocked Congress the consequences of its own futility.

For that he drew considerable praise from Democrats, Chrysler and General Motors, the distinctly more tempered appreciation of the United Auto Workers union and the scorn of fellow Republicans all the while preserving complete freedom for his successor to start anew on Jan. 20.

Whatever the terms, targets or requirements of the loans that Mr. Bush's Treasury Department laid out, administration officials said President-elect Barack Obama was free to change them at his will.

Because the loans were ordered by the administration, rather than mandated in legislation, the money flows first and the repayment terms are literally written on paper that the new president can rewrite. He can ease or toughen provisions in future negotiations.

In a likely harbinger, the autoworkers union became first in line to seek changes.

Mr. Bush, no particular friend of organized labor, had wanted the UAW to agree to wage and benefit concessions that would make union workers equal in compensation to employees turning out Japanese cars at factories in the United States.

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., objected, and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson agreed to a change that said the compensation could be competitive, rather than equal.

Not yet satisfied, the union's Alan Reuther said, "The UAW believes these provisions unfairly single out workers. They were not part of the agreement that the White House entered into with the Congress. We believe they should be removed."

It's the type of detail likely to come up again and again as the new administration tries to assure the survival of the auto industry without antagonizing organized labor, a key Democratic constituency.

"I just want to make sure that when we see a final restructuring package that it's not just workers who are bearing the brunt of that package," Mr. Obama said.

Congress Reacts To Bailout
Click here for details of the auto bailout
CNET's Brian Cooley: The "Detroit's A Loser" Myth
Click here to read the full text of President Bush's announcement
Click here to see details of General Motor's bailout terms
Click here to see details of Chrysler's bailout terms
He didn't say so, but some Democrats have already declared General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner must go, for example.

It's unlikely any Republicans will be surprised by such maneuvering. But after 14 years of controlling at least one branch of government, they are soon be spectators.

Mr. Bush's big concession came when he agreed to help the auto industry with funds from the Troubled Asset Recovery Program, the $700 billion bailout that Congress approved last fall to stabilize the financial industry.

He had long said his administration lacked authority to dip into TARP to help the automakers. But that insistence crumbled a week ago when Congress gridlocked over legislation.

But there is a catch, at least as long as Mr. Bush's version of the loan remains in force.

Of the $17.4 billion in the loan package, $13.4 billion is available this month and next. The remainder will be used only if the administration is free to tap the $350 billion that remains in the financial industry bailout fund. And that can only happen if Congress first votes on releasing the funds.

It's a vote Democrats would just as soon not take, given widespread public opposition to bailouts.

In concluding that he had to step in, Mr. Bush also set aside his free-market principles, though on a far smaller scale than when he agreed to bail out big banks last fall.

Only a day earlier, he had spoken favorably of bankruptcy as the preferred way to let companies bear the consequences of their decisions. And yet, he said, "these are not ordinary circumstances."

The fact that he was left with no choice reflected economic reality as well as his political weakness in the final weeks in office.

While Mr. Bush and Democrats agreed rather easily on a rescue bill earlier this month, Senate Republicans wanted no part of it.

Several officials said that despite an invitation to join those talks, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky decided not to send representatives.

That way, when the White House and Democrats reached their compromise, he was free to walk away.

He did, to the embarrassment of the White House, which watched from the sidelines little more than a week ago as Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee and other Republicans sought unsuccessfully to wring far-reaching concessions from the UAW.

When their bid failed, Senate Republicans killed the legislation that Democrats and the administration had written.

The UAW seemed unperturbed, calculating that Mr. Obama would be a less demanding master.

They may be right.


By David Espo, AP's chief congressional correspondent

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 89 Comments
by stupidrules3 December 22, 2008 10:13 AM EST
It looks like GWB wants to be able to say,"The carmakers didn''t fail on my watch." This administration has violated many of the fundamental economic principles that the republican party has always said are inviolable. We will be paying for this fiasco for years and it will only delay the inevitable demise of these dinosaurs.
Reply to this comment
by xmas6661 December 22, 2008 4:20 AM EST
Anyway, I''''ve gotta do some XMAS shopping.

Unlike you Dems I''''m not an atheist

and I still have the means to do some solid spending.

Posted by faletinme at 04:56 PM : Dec 20, 2008


GOOD LUCK WITH THAT CHRISTIAN ACT I''M NOT IMPRESSED THOUGH

A FEW REMINDERS BTW,

Witnessing

[H]e that winneth souls is wise. Proverbs 11:30

Selfishness

they all look to their own way, every one for his gain, from his quarter.
Isaiah 56:11


Selfishness is a malignant cancer. It seems like all our society is based on ourselves. All we think about is ourselves. What about me? What about my feelings, my time, my money? With many of us, all we can think of is ourselves, and what we can get out of life. We''re so busy thinking about ourselves that we fail to notice others. All we think about is ourselves, our little social groups, and ignore and exclude everyone else.

%u201CBut in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better that themselves.%u201D (Phil 2:3). We should meekly and humbly consider everyone else BETTER than ourselves.



Merry Christmas to all

And best regards to everyone that is having a tough time this year

May Christmas bring renewed hope to you for the coming year
Reply to this comment
by bjcone8559 December 21, 2008 11:19 AM EST
Have no fear. In one month the Messiah will be here and we will all get free hybrid cars and heal the planet


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by jedi23231



At least we will start hedading in the direction of healing the nation. It''s going to take a lot of healing after the criminal Bush/Cheney regime.
Reply to this comment
by faletinme December 21, 2008 2:49 AM EST
About the time our original thirteen states adopted their new constitution in 1787, Alexander Tyler, a Scottish history professor at the University of Edinburgh , had this to say about the fall of the Athenian Republic some 2,000 years earlier:


''A democracy is always temporary in nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government.''


''A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury.''


''From that moment on, the majority always vote for the candidates who promise the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, which is always followed by a dictatorship.''


''The average age of the world''s greatest civilizations from the beginning of history, has been about 200 years''


''During those 200 years, those nations always progressed through the following sequence:


1. From bondage to spiritual faith;


2. From spiritual faith to great courage;


3. From courage to liberty;


4. From liberty to abundance;


5. From abundance to complacency;


6. From complacency to apathy;


7. From apathy to dependence;


8. From dependence back into bondage''



Democrats are trying to foster the Dependency Stage, after having been elected as a result of the Apathy Stage.
Reply to this comment
by faletinme December 21, 2008 1:30 AM EST
It''s too bad Jedi. This fool hasn''t the slightest inkling of how sky-high capital gains tax rates, windfall profits taxes, unfounded environmental red tape, failure to check the mortgage lending, pro union legislation (check out H.R. 280 that was thankfully killed by republican senators but will likely pass in the new admin, it aims to force collective bargaining on all municipalities!).

Of course he doesn''t understand why Dems overwhelming support of handing $700 billion over to selected banks might have deleterious effects.
It was uneducated, unthinking voters tat got us into this mess.

Yes, Bush was pretty bad but it doesn''t make sense to unthinkingly turn to something worse!
Reply to this comment
by faletinme December 21, 2008 1:27 AM EST
It''s too bad Jedi. This fool hasn''t the slightest inkling of how sky-high capital gains tax rates, windfall profits taxes, unfounded environmental red tape, failure to check the mortgage lending, pro union legislation (check out H.R. 280 that was thankfully killed by republican senators but will likely pass in the new admin, it aims to force collective bargaining on all municipalities!).

Of course he doesn''t understand why Dems overwhelming support of handing $700 billion over to selected banks might have deleterious effects.
It was uneducated, unthinking voters tat got us into this mess.

Yes, Bush was pretty bad but it doesn''t make sense to unthinkingly turn to something worse!
Reply to this comment
by faletinme December 21, 2008 12:04 AM EST
This is true DebinOK. Dem revel when the average American is distressed and abhor the times when the average American is doing well.

When they can engineer bad times as they''ve done in the past 2 yrs people tend to believe their populist savior ***, as they did with Jiminy Carter. But of course as things get bleaker under the democrat cloud people wise up. The market perfomance statistics I post early tell the story. Dems only have a use for poor people, once they are successful the dems want nothing to do with them. It is the party that fosters and prays on misery.

Anyone with half a brain predicted this when NAncy Pelosi stood on the Capitol steps with her sh* t eaten grin in Jan 2007. Of course, they were right. This experiment with a democrat congress has been 4 trillion dollar disaster.
Reply to this comment
by debinok1 December 20, 2008 11:47 PM EST
Hey, look around the corner, thats the next depression breathing down our necks, start saving cash at home, start stocking up on non perishables, purchase a generator if possible. This is gonna hit hard.
Reply to this comment
by faletinme December 20, 2008 11:22 PM EST
It''s interesting that IAm Hungry "couldn''t find any reference to this article. It took me about a minute.

Also funny that Hungry would interpret my having done some shopping as some kind of admission. That''s an old liberal tactic.
Reply to this comment
by faletinme December 20, 2008 11:17 PM EST
Her''s a piece form the NY Times:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E06E3D6123BF932A2575AC0A9659C8B63

It lays it out pretty well.

The 2003 article quote Barney Frank as saying:''''These two entities -- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- are not facing any kind of financial crisis,'''' said Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, the ranking Democrat on the Financial Services Committee. ''''The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing.''''

So you lied...it''s a 2003 quote.
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