August 3, 2009 1:22 PM

Senate Under Pressure to Extend "Clunkers"

(CBS/AP)  Updated 1:15 p.m. ET

The Senate came under increasing pressure Monday to refuel the stalling "cash-for-clunkers" initiative amid uncertainty over how much money, if any, is left in the fund bankrolling the popular program.

The Obama administration pushed for an additional $2 billion after serving notice over the weekend that the program could expire as early as this week unless the Senate acts, as the House did in voting overwhelmingly for the money last Friday.

Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood is predicting the Senate will pass legislation adding $2 billion to save a financially strapped "clash-for-clunkers" car-buying program.

LaHood said Monday that the program has been "wildly popular" and argued that it is good for the economy as well as the environment. In an interview broadcast on MSNBC, LaHood declined to discuss administration options if the Senate does not act before it goes on its summer recess at the end of the week.

LaHood said, "We're encouraging senators to listen to their car dfealers and the people they represent. If they do that, it will pass the Senate."

Fierce lobbying for keeping the program running came from several quarters. The National Automobile Dealers Association and the American International Automobile Dealers said they were contacting thousands of dealerships and encouraging them to bombard the Senate with phone calls and e-mails.

"This is the one true stimulus that seems to be working out of all the things that have been tried in the last few months," said Cody Lusk, president of the international dealer association.

CBS News correspondent Bob Fuss reports that despite the pressure, it's not certain the Senate will act. The Senate was very cool to this program the first time around with some leading Democrats thinking it didn't to enough to make sure the new cars it subsidized got really good gas mileage and many Republicans objected to what they saw as another bailout for the auto industry.

The program barely passed the first time, and only because it was attached to a must-pass bill funding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

LaHood had said earlier that if the $2 billion isn't approved, "we would have to suspend the program." At the same time, LaHood told C-SPAN's "Newsmakers" show Sunday that the administration would "continue the program until we see what the Senate does and I believe the Senate will pass this."

"Any deal that is made (Monday) or the next day and that is in the pipeline, ... the dealer will be reimbursed and the car buyer will be reimbursed," the secretary declared.

The program provides consumers with $3,500 or $4,500 in incentives for trading in gas guzzlers for more fuel efficient vehicles. Automakers were reporting July's auto sales on Monday and analysts expected the car program to provide a boost in overall sales.

Only the Senate can help at this point; the House last Friday voted for the money to be put into the popular program, and the House members have left on their summer recess. The Senate is scheduled to start its vacation by week's end.

At least one GOP senator questioned the need to speed the money.

"This is crazy to try to rush this thing through again while they're trying to rush through health care, and they want to get on to cap and trade electricity tax," said Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C. "We've got to slow this thing down."

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said car and truck building had begun to rebound even before the program got under way. But, he added, "there is no doubt that that very extraordinary response is a very important indicator that the state of confidence in the economy is beginning to pick up." If the incentive program had gone into place six months ago, he said, "it would have probably been a dud."

Obama officials scrambled last week to add money to the Car Allowance Rebate System (CARS), which is designed to get old, polluting vehicles off the road and scrapped while helping car dealers emerge from the recession. The $1 billion has led to the sale of 250,000 new vehicles.

Owners of gas-guzzlers can receive rebates of $3,500 or $4,500 toward the purchase of a new fuel-efficient car. LaHood said 62 percent of the traded-in vehicles were trucks and "these people are buying cars that get much better gas mileage."

The program helped lift Ford Motor Co. to its first monthly sales increase in two years, the company's top sales analyst said Sunday.

July sales results mark the first year-over-year gain for Ford since November 2007 and apparently the first uptick by any of the six biggest carmakers since last August, George Pipas said. He declined to disclose a specific total before sales results are officially reported Monday.

"We were having a good month - and Ford's been having some good months lately - but the (clunkers) program really put us over the top for sure," Pipas said.

Meanwhile, Chrysler is dropping its offer to increase the rebate offered by the government plan, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Pennsylvania car dealer Bill Rosado told the Journal, "I can't believe I'm saying this, I need more Chrysler inventory. My goodness, I've got to rehearse that line a couple times." (Read more in EconWatch.)

The Senate narrowly approved the initial money in June. But some lawmakers who voted for the plan, including Sens. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, have said the additional dollars should push consumers to buy more fuel-efficient vehicles and allow people to buy fuel-efficient used vehicles. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., has said he was concerned with the way the House paid for the extension, shifting $2 billion from a renewable energy loan program.

LaHood said dealers will be reimbursed for deals in the pipeline and that the government will make a "good-faith effort" for transactions beginning Monday.

© 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 12 Comments
by TheMasses2009 August 3, 2009 2:12 PM EDT
Senate Under Pressure to Extend "Clunker"
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So the Senate is extending Maobama's time in office?
Reply to this comment
by cydygitt1 August 4, 2009 12:13 PM EDT
Why do you republiCONS hate America so much, that your marginalized party of southern, white, evangelical morons vote against a working stimulus program for U.S. auto manufacturing and sales?

Oh...that's right.....toyota, nissan, honda, etc....all have plants in the deep RED southern states, and their reps are getting $$$$$$$$$'s.
by cowboy668-2009 August 3, 2009 2:08 PM EDT
I hope the Senate doesn't pass it unless their is a stipulation that it applies to buying cars made in the USA only.
Reply to this comment
by cydygitt1 August 4, 2009 12:10 PM EDT
Please get a different source of REAL NEWS for a change, since your tired, old entertainment from the foxnewsus propagandus is giving you some very bad information!
by TheMasses2009 August 3, 2009 2:02 PM EDT
Why don't they bring back the Pinto?
Great MPG and it blows up too.
Reply to this comment
by CyCarConsulting August 3, 2009 1:11 PM EDT
Everyone knows now how successful the Clunker program has been. Now think about this. In all the flurry to satisfy those buyers, used car inventory, and used car buyers have been neglected. That means starting now, there are aged units coming up that will have to be sold, for whatever the dealerships can get. As soon as the Clunker program ends ,or at the end of this month ,whichever comes first, there will be deals on those aged units. If you are in the market for a used car, I would suggest you visit your local dealer. Ask the salespeople to show you the aged units. Most likely a bonus on them for the salespeople, and managers ,will be compensation enough , and the likelyhood of not worrying about any profit on the car. A deal for you, if you negotiate hard. You may not even have to negotiate, some stores will have marked the cars down already.The store will lose money, but those units must be sold regardless.
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by cowboy668-2009 August 3, 2009 1:25 PM EDT
They are NOT suppost to resale the car that was traded in. They are suppost to fill the crank case with some chemical and run the engine untill it seizes up and then crush the car
by cowboy668-2009 August 3, 2009 1:07 PM EDT
Why in the hell are they giving people 4500.00 to buy a foriegn car ? I thought this wAs supose to help the US car makers Only !
Reply to this comment
by cydygitt1 August 4, 2009 12:07 PM EDT
Actually, I have no idea where you got that bad info (maybe FUUXX NoNooz or RNC leader rushbo) but the majority of the program has been trading-in older foreign vehicles for new, energy-efficient U.S. vehicles that get about 10 mpg better! Great stimulus for the ailing U.S. car companies that the moronic RED states that have all the foreign car manufacturing actually hate, and will vote against extending the program since the republiCONS hate America!
by TheMasses2009 August 3, 2009 12:14 PM EDT
My 1943 Sherman Tank gets 1 MPG.
It's time .................
Reply to this comment
by TheMasses2009 August 3, 2009 12:16 PM EDT
Now the 1944 Tiger Tank - that's a classic I would keep!
1.5 MPG too!
by Joe_NY_15 August 3, 2009 12:59 PM EDT
the Tiger....That's some "heavy metal"
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