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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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What Was Wrong With the Auto Bailout? Nothing

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Among the mysteries of public opinion, this one most strains the brain: Why do so many Americans think the government rescue of Detroit automakers was a bad — nay, an evil — thing? The bailout has been a rousing success, and that's the business press talking.

The Economist magazine opposed the bailout. Now it writes, "An apology is due to Barack Obama: His takeover of GM could have gone horribly wrong, but it hasn't."

As Obama "car czar" Steven Rattner told Bloomberg BusinessWeek, "I find it mind-boggling that these companies have come out of bankruptcy, yet a plurality of the country still thinks it was a bad idea for the government to get involved."

Perhaps Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert best explained the public's lack of gratitude: "This was a success for the Obama administration, taking over these companies, and so like most Americans, I've forgotten it."

Two years ago, General Motors and Chrysler were headed for oblivion. Letting these companies reorganize under normal Chapter 11 bankruptcies, as many free-marketeers advocated, would have ended in failure.

Recall how the financial markets, in full panic mode, froze credit. "It is more likely," The Economist writes, "that GM would have been liquidated, sending a cascade of destruction through the supply chain on which its rivals, too, depended." An additional 1 million jobs would have gone poof.

The industrial Midwest could have utterly collapsed. The psychological blow of seeing GM — the symbol of American manufacturing might — go down amid a terrifying Wall Street meltdown would have spread economic disaster coast to coast.

Thanks to the government intervention, General Motors is out of bankruptcy and again turning profits. Chrysler is stabilized. Last April, GM paid back its loan in full and with interest years ahead of schedule.

Next month, the Treasury will begin selling off its ownership of GM through an initial public offering of stock.

Yet many tea party/Republican politicians persist in portraying this story as one of government overreach forced on good Americans by Washington socialists. They totally forget the economic mayhem that was gripping the country. Or perhaps they simply welcome any opportunity to bash unions.

Back in the scary days, Sen. Jim DeMint, the South Carolina Republican, rejected extending taxpayer support to the flailing auto companies. He said that "we're not going to do it with the barnacles of unionism wrapped around their necks." (Never mind that the administration's restructuring plan hit workers with sharp cuts in pay and benefits. Never mind that it forced many more plant closings.)

Most inexplicably, these "anti-government" candidates are gaining ground with blue-collar voters, including in the Midwest. These are the very workers they were ready to sacrifice on the altar of an extreme free-market god.

The $86-billion bailout was a gamble, all right, but it was a bet that America won. And it was won not through dumb luck but the administration's skilled management of the bankruptcy. And the good news keeps coming. At the last count, the bailout's actual cost to taxpayers has fallen to $17 billion, according to the Detroit News.

Meanwhile, revived consumer faith in a restructured Detroit has sparked new life in the automotive heartland. Recent growing demand prompted nine GM plants — four in Michigan and one in Indiana — to skip their usual summer shutdowns. GM and Chrysler have added shifts. Ford, which didn't need government help, continues to go great guns.

Yes, the Midwest is still suffering economically. And "it would have been worse without us" does not make a spiffy Democratic campaign slogan. But have Midwesterners so forgotten how their region was saved that they would elect those who wouldn't lift a finger to help them?

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

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Comments

9 Comments | Post Comment
Elites who find the public mysterious is what is wrong with the auto bailout. We are certain that whatever little success the dems enjoy will be used against us to grow more government regulation of our lives. Isn't that what this administration has been all about? Do most people really want compulsory health care? Cap and trade? You are telling us that when a man pulls your hair, slaps your face, twists your nose, shakes your hand and then kicks you in the shins we should be grateful and congratulate him for the handshake. Not mystifying, downright stupefying.
Dems will lose this time around, but it is not the end of the world. Alec Baldwin will threaten to leave the country and we can find some solace in that he might just do it. Don't quote Colbert, he is merely an entertainer and has no expertise in anything let alone credibility with serious people.
Sit in a dimly lit room all by yourself and ponder the mystery of people who wish to be free of government regulation and grand social schemes. Recall who foots the bill for this nonsense. Reach back to colonial times if you must search for a precedent. When a proper degree of humility has been reached you will be ready to govern again, and we will welcome you back in that role.
A sadder but wiser democratic party is needed. You will have to strive for the second construct. And don't feel alone, the republican elites are in trouble too, they just don't see it yet.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Tom
Thu Oct 21, 2010 6:31 AM
It must be sad to be so hung up on ideology that you ignore the benefits of pursuing what has been proven to work. Example: Cap and Trade. Why was it such a good thing when the Reagan Administration set it up and such a bad thing now?
Comment: #2
Posted by: Tom Blanton
Thu Oct 21, 2010 5:40 PM
Hi Froma, Any Taxpayer money given to failed private business is a badddddd! idea. Like taking from the poor and giving to the very rich, that is just wrong. Have you forgotten about natural process? It is folks like you that ruin The United Stated Of America. One way or another one of us has lost our mind! The basis of this country was democracy not socialism. Quote from Thomas Jefferson " To preserve our independence, we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt... I am for a government rigorously frugal and simple" As am I
Ed Blanchard
Comment: #3
Posted by: Ed Blanchard
Fri Oct 22, 2010 6:45 PM
To claim that there was nothing wrong with the auto bailout is either a willlful attempt at self-delusion or complete ignorance of the facts. It is speculation to assert that a Chapter 11 bankruptcy would have ended in disaster In fact, it would have enabled the auto companies to be free of onerous labor contracts and legacy costs which led to their predicament. These settlements also usurped commercial law which prioritizes claims on distressed businesses such a senior debt holders. That will certainly influence investors, domestic an international regarding the rule of law in commercial matters when considering future investments in corporate America. The statement about GM paying its debt with interest left out the part where it was done with more borrowed federal money. One can certainly7 question your financial acumen with that statement. Debtholders of Chrysler's debt were truly screwed for the benefit of the UAW in a crass political payoff as were a large number of workers at subsidiary companies such as Delta Auto Parts in getting less of their benefits than those with GM The entire operation of the auto bailout was the crassest example of Chicago payoffs to the detriment of commercial law and ethical fairness. Re: Steven Rattner and his pronouncements, talk to his criminal defencse lawyer. Opinions are like feet. Most everyone has a couple but sometimes they stink. This one of your is odoriferous.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Donald Devlin
Sat Oct 23, 2010 8:53 AM
Really are you suggesting that President Reagan proposed a "cap and trade" law? Please provide some facts to back this assertion up.
Comment: #5
Posted by: bob
Mon Oct 25, 2010 12:21 PM
Re: Tom Blanton See above comment.
Comment: #6
Posted by: bob
Mon Oct 25, 2010 12:21 PM
I have seen some media stories trying to prop up this "auto bail out" before but this takes the cake.
Comment: #7
Posted by: bob
Mon Oct 25, 2010 12:23 PM
Reagan proposed, and pushed through, cap and trade legislation to control acid rain.

You'd think that people who are smart enough to write a comment would be smart enough to google "Ronald Reagan cap and trade".

But, then, teabaggers are so hung up with confirmation bias that their opinions trump history anyway.
Comment: #8
Posted by: Geoffrey James
Tue Oct 26, 2010 4:07 AM
As for the auto bailout, what part of "we made money on the deal" don't you understand? Oh, wait. Obama did it, so it must be a failure. But when Reagan bailed out Chrysler in the 1980s, that was a great success. Oh, I get it. When Obama does something it's bad, when Reagan does something it's good. Even if it's the exact same thing. Welcome to logic, Teabagger style.
Comment: #9
Posted by: Geoffrey James
Tue Oct 26, 2010 4:13 AM
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