Mail
Magazine 24…
The
Democrats’ False Narrative on the Auto
Industry
by Bright Knight
Note:
I’ve often thought a Chapter 11 court
protection bankruptcy would have been the better option for GM and
Chrysler but
I never saw anything written about it. Finally! Thanks MM24 for
providing it.
Editor
Romney
was absolutely right with his statement
at the time the auto-industry was going under in 2008: a managed
bankruptcy
would have been the only really stable and lasting solution. The
Failure-in-Chief
didn't address the problems that caused the financial problem but put
some
(very expensive) band-aid on it, just to please his strike force and
one of his
sources of funds, the unions. And btw: Joe Biden is wrong, GM is
anything bit
alive. GM is a rouged zombie, thirsting for more taxpayer-money.
Rand
Simberg explains very well at PJmedia why
the Democrat's story is just a blatant lie:
Joe
Biden has a bumper-sticker phrase to
justify reelecting the president: “Bin Laden is dead, and GM is alive.”
Some,
such as former Michigan governor Jennifer Granholm, doubled down on the
demagoguery during the Democratic National Convention, declaring that
Barack
Obama saved not just General Motors, but the auto industry itself. But
is it
really true that were it not for the president, there would be no
American auto
industry?
Let’s
start with Governor Granholm’s claim that
Romney said that the “industry should go bankrupt.” Here’s what he
actually
wrote at the time:
The
American auto industry is vital to our
national interest as an employer and as a hub for manufacturing. A
managed
bankruptcy may be the only path to the fundamental restructuring the
industry
needs. It would permit the companies to shed excess labor, pension and
real
estate costs. The federal government should provide guarantees for
post-bankruptcy financing and assure car buyers that their warranties
are not
at risk.
In
other words, he actually endorsed a
government bailout. While it would no doubt have been better if the
title of
his piece hadn’t been “Let Detroit Go Bankrupt” (that likely came from
the
editorial page copy editor, not Romney himself), what he proposed was
completely reasonable, in the context of a bailout (whether there
should have
been a bailout at all is a separate issue).
Part
of the problem is that the governor is
either ignorant herself or hopes that her listeners are ignorant of the
meaning
of the word “bankruptcy.” It doesn’t necessarily mean that the bankrupt
company
ceases to exist, let alone that the industry itself would disappear. It
simply
means that the business is restructured to allow it to continue to
operate if
it is producing viable products. This might include voiding existing
contracts
and agreements (including labor agreements), and renegotiating with
creditors.
But to listen to the Democrats, if Obama hadn’t stepped in, there would
be no
autos built in America today, and millions more people would be out of
work.
This is nonsense, on multiple levels.
Let’s
review the history. In the fall of 2008,
amid the general financial crisis and global recession, Ford, General
Motors,
and Chrysler were hemorrhaging money and came to the government with
their
hands out. There was a hearing in Washington (at which the
well-compensated
auto executives were stupidly criticized for attending via private jet,
as if
their time had no value). Rick Wagoner, then-head of GM, brazenly
declared that
failure to bail his company out would be the cause of a “catastrophic
economic
collapse” of the U.S. economy.
Ford
was actually in reasonable shape to
weather the economic storm compared to its two American competitors,
having
undergone restructuring on its own in the past half decade, but it came
to the
table because it didn’t want to be at a competitive disadvantage in
terms of access
to taxpayer funds. In addition, Alan Alan Mulally, its CEO, claimed
that the
loss of one or more of its competitors would affect its supplier base,
which it
shared with them. But all of these claims had to be taken with a grain
of salt,
considering how self-serving they were.
In
early December, unhappy with the automakers’
restructuring plans, the Senate voted down a taxpayer bailout, but
lame-duck
president George W. Bush, by executive order, overrode Section 102 of
the TARP
funding, meant to provide bridge loans to prop up failing financial
institutions while they came up with restructuring plans, and issued
them to GM
and Chrysler. This turned out to be not only (probably) illegal, but a
terrible
policy, because it gave the Obama administration an excuse, as a
“watchdog on
the taxpayers’ money,” to interfere with what should have been a
properly
structured bankruptcy for both companies when it came into power in
January, to
aid its political allies.
What
Jennifer Granholm and others need to
understand is that in fact both GM and Chrysler did file for
bankruptcy, and
did restructure. But rather than doing it before an impartial
bankruptcy judge
with a negotiation between the companies and their creditors, as a
major (new)
creditor, the federal government (Obama’s federal government) became
the
arbiter instead, screwing the existing bondholders. Rather than the UAW
being
forced to renegotiate the terms of its contracts with those companies
that had
been a partial cause of their financial failure, the administration
simply
handed part of them over to the union, with an arbitrary amount of
stock in
return for their pension obligations, and converting its own debt to
stock.
What
would have happened had the government not
stepped in? Well, we know what wouldn’t have happened. It wouldn’t have
been
the end of the auto industry in America. Honda, Nissan, Toyota,
Mercedes and
the other companies would have continued to manufacture cars in the
U.S.
without missing a beat. It wouldn’t even have been the end of the
American auto
industry, because Ford never received any government funds, and they
have
actually been pulling thousands of jobs back from Mexico and Asia to
the U.S.
Chrysler and GM would have probably continued in some form, and
undergone a
proper restructuring, including renegotiation of the union contracts to
make
them competitive once more. In the worst case, liquidation, Ford (or
someone
else, perhaps even a startup) could have acquired their assets and
expanded its
own production to satisfy the demand created by the disappearance of
the two
companies.
That
is, contra the latest false narrative of
the campaign, Obama didn’t “save the car companies from bankruptcy,”
let alone
“save the auto industry” — he simply saved the UAW, the
administration’s
political ally, from a bankruptcy judge. Judge Gerber’s ruling in July
of 2009
was simply a rubber stamp of a corrupt government restructuring by fiat.
Read
this and other articles at Mail Magazine
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