You be the Judge:
Mitt Romney is distorting history, again! Talking to a
Cleveland Television station yesterday, he attempted to take credit for the
re-organization of the auto industry. He is claiming as in the nature of the
Swift Vote Veteran on John Kerry, that he deserves a lot of credit for the
comeback of the auto industry.
Please tell Mr. Romney, he is a liar; he wanted the auto
industry to go burst! He even wrote an opinion page to that effect in a New
York Times Opinion Page on November 18, 2008**. There is nothing as managed bankruptcy; bankruptcy is bankruptcy,
Mr. Magic underpants! President Obama believed in the America’s Auto
industry and put his money where his mouth is! Thanks President Obama, for
having the back of the auto industry. This general election is not going to be
won by distortion of history. Mr. Mitt Romney has just justified Mr. Newt Gingrich's assessment of him during the Republican Nomination Process!
**HERE IS MITT ROMNEY’s OPINION IN THE NEW YORK TIMES OF
NOVEMBER 18th 2008
Op-Ed
Contributor
Let Detroit Go Bankrupt
By MITT ROMNEY
Published: November 18, 2008
IF General Motors, Ford and Chrysler
get the bailout that their chief executives asked for yesterday, you can kiss
the American automotive industry goodbye. It won’t go overnight, but its demise
will be virtually guaranteed.
Without that
bailout, Detroit
will need to drastically restructure itself. With it, the automakers will stay
the course — the suicidal course of declining market shares, insurmountable
labor and retiree burdens, technology atrophy, product inferiority and
never-ending job losses. Detroit needs a turnaround, not a check.
I love cars,
American cars. I was born in Detroit,
the son of an auto chief executive. In 1954, my dad, George Romney, was tapped
to run American Motors when its president suddenly died. The company itself was
on life support — banks were threatening to deal it a death blow. The stock
collapsed. I watched Dad work to turn the company around — and years later at
business school, they were still talking about it. From the lessons of that
turnaround, and from my own experiences, I have several prescriptions for Detroit’s automakers.
First, their huge
disadvantage in costs relative to foreign brands must be eliminated. That means
new labor agreements to align pay and benefits to match those of workers at
competitors like BMW, Honda, Nissan and Toyota.
Furthermore, retiree benefits must be reduced so that the total burden per auto
for domestic makers is not higher than that of foreign producers.
That extra burden
is estimated to be more than $2,000 per car. Think what that means: Ford, for
example, needs to cut $2,000 worth of features and quality out of its Taurus to
compete with Toyota’s
Avalon. Of course the Avalon feels like a better product — it has $2,000 more
put into it. Considering this disadvantage, Detroit has done a remarkable job of
designing and engineering its cars. But if this cost penalty persists, any
bailout will only delay the inevitable.
Second,
management as is must go. New faces should be recruited from unrelated
industries — from companies widely respected for excellence in marketing,
innovation, creativity and labor relations.
The new
management must work with labor leaders to see that the enmity between labor
and management comes to an end. This division is a holdover from the early
years of the last century, when unions brought workers job security and better
wages and benefits. But as Walter Reuther, the former head of the United
Automobile Workers, said to my father, “Getting more and more pay for less and
less work is a dead-end street.”
You don’t have to
look far for industries with unions that went down that road. Companies in the
21st century cannot perpetuate the destructive labor relations of the 20th.
This will mean a new direction for the U.A.W., profit sharing or stock grants
to all employees and a change in Big Three management culture.
The need for
collaboration will mean accepting sanity in salaries and perks. At American
Motors, my dad cut his pay and that of his executive team, he bought stock in
the company, and he went out to factories to talk to workers directly. Get rid
of the planes, the executive dining rooms — all the symbols that breed
resentment among the hundreds of thousands who will also be sacrificing to keep
the companies afloat.
Investments must
be made for the future. No more focus on quarterly earnings or the kind of
short-term stock appreciation that means quick riches for executives with
options. Manage with an eye on cash flow, balance sheets and long-term appreciation.
Invest in truly competitive products and innovative technologies — especially
fuel-saving designs — that may not arrive for years. Starving research and
development is like eating the seed corn.
Just as important
to the future of American carmakers is the sales force. When sales are down,
you don’t want to lose the only people who can get them to grow. So don’t fire
the best dealers, and don’t crush them with new financial or performance
demands they can’t meet.
It is not wrong
to ask for government help, but the automakers should come up with a win-win
proposition. I believe the federal government should invest substantially more
in basic research — on new energy sources, fuel-economy technology, materials
science and the like — that will ultimately benefit the automotive industry,
along with many others. I believe Washington
should raise energy research spending to $20 billion a year, from the $4
billion that is spent today. The research could be done at universities, at
research labs and even through public-private collaboration. The federal
government should also rectify the imbedded tax penalties that favor foreign
carmakers.
But don’t ask Washington to give
shareholders and bondholders a free pass — they bet on management and they
lost.
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 a managed
bankruptcy, the federal government would propel newly competitive and viable
automakers, rather than seal their fate with a bailout check.
Mitt Romney, the former
governor of Massachusetts,
was a candidate for this year’s Republican presidential nomination.

American Voters, please, please and please, don’t be fooled and misinformed this
time around! You have the front row seat, judge by what you have read above. Mitt Romney may be the first fraud seeking to inhabit the White House come 2013!
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