GM: Government Motors
WASHINGTON - If the government takes a majority stake in General Motors, will it end up taking the wheel, too?
Under a restructuring plan put forth this week by GM, the ailing automaker would give majority ownership to the federal government to stave off bankruptcy. That handoff would amount to an extraordinary nationalization of the maker of Buicks, Cadillacs and Chevys that has been an independent company since 1908.
The Obama administration has said it isn’t interested in running an auto company, but with that big of a stake, some analysts say the government would probably be tempted to push its own policies on such issues as alternative fuel vehicles and unions. And that could affect the types of cars that roll off GM’s assembly lines.
“The fear here is that a company owned by the government would move toward the do-good results, not the bottom line,” said Gerald Meyers, a University of Michigan business professor and former CEO of American Motors Corp.
GM’s proposal would give the government more than 50 percent of the automaker’s stock in exchange for forgiving $10 billion in government loans. The United Auto Workers union would end up with a 39 percent stake.
The plan is far from a sure thing. Holders of GM’s $27 billion in unsecured debt have dismissed it as unfair because they would lose most of their investment. And the White House repeated this week that it doesn’t want to own GM or any other auto company.
But through its broad efforts to rescue the auto industry, the White House is already deeply involved in the operations of GM and Chrysler. It has sunk nearly $25 billion into the two companies and their financial arms, and is ready to give them even more if their restructuring plans are deemed workable. The Obama administration has already flexed its muscle by forcing out Rick Wagoner as GM’s CEO.
GM said Monday that it would still retain day-to-day control of the company. But at the direction of the Treasury Department, GM will replace several members of its board of directors at its annual meeting in August. In most corporations, the board sets long-term policies and goals. If the handover plan goes through, at least one of those seats will probably be held by a government representative who would look out for the taxpayers’ interests.
“The U.S. government as a major shareholder would probably ensure that the board is doing their role,” GM chief financial officer Ray Young said in an interview this week.
Exactly what interests the government would look out for remains to be seen.
Some analysts said that with government ownership of GM, the company could be used to press issues like building more fuel-efficient vehicles and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
GM, which spent recent years selling SUVs and other gas-guzzlers, is already making a push into hybrid and electric vehicle technology and is spinning off the behemoth Hummer. But its best-selling vehicle is still the Chevy Silverado, a full-size pickup truck.
In another possible conflict of interest, the White House could find itself in the odd position of being a partner with the UAW while simultaneously sitting on the board as it negotiates contracts with the union.
“This almost by definition injects politics into the reorganization,” said James Gattuso, a scholar at the Washington-based Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank.
However, Michael Ettlinger, vice president for economic policy at the Washington-based Center for American Progress, a liberal policy group, said that while the government would have an interest in protecting its investment in GM, it probably wouldn’t try to dictate how the company does business or what types of vehicles it makes.
As a member of GM’s board, the government would have a responsibility to the company and its shareholders to make sound business decisions, not those based on policy, Ettlinger said.
“The administration’s strategy to deal with our energy challenges is not to take over automobile companies and make them do things. That is a losing strategy,” he said.
Meyers said the British auto industry, which went through a period of nationalization during the 1970s, holds some clues to government ownership. In that case, he said, pressure groups like unions held powerful sway through their allies in the government.
“It’s a populism kind of management,” he said.
As for how long Washington would stay in the auto business, Ettlinger said the government might hold a stake in GM for several years, but added: “I don’t think that long-term the federal government is interested in running companies.”
(AP)








As if they didn’t make shitty enough cars already. Now they’ll be government-built.
Shitty little cars … Make terrible coffins.
why is o’s logo up there and the the american eagle?
It’s called nationalism and then marxism.
Because it was actually our billions, how much stock will we each have in GM?
Why aren’t more American’s screaming over this and all the other craziness in the administration?
And to think this all happened during the “Honeymoon” period. Imagine what’s down the road . . .
well YERMOM hopes that gov’t agencies are going to buy them, cause I dont know anyone that is.
I will NEVER again buy a GM or Chrysler product again. I currently own a Dodge Dakota pick up. If and when I buy another vehicle it will either be a Ford F150 4×4 pick up (as long as Ford stays independent of the federal government) or a foreign pick up. I will not buy the pregnant roller skates that GM is about to produce under government direction. I am a redneck, tea bag protesting grandmother who drives a pick up who lives in Michigan and we own a damn boat - what the fuck am I supposed to haul the boat with? A gall damn fucking Yugo! This fucking stupid administration tells us spending is the way out of recession - but tighten your belt. Well I am not giving up weekends with the boat because they want me to drive a fucking death trap!
And as a side note people - all those cars and trucks on the road with a bumper sticker for “O” or “Obama” - I suggest making labels in large print that say SHIT. When you see a car in a lot with the Obama bumper sticker - throw the SHIT label after the O so it says O - SHIT!!!!
This is great news! GM is a customer of mine. If the federal government is willing to pay $700 for a hammer just think what they will pay for my interior automotive parts!
Seriously thinking about getting rid of my 1.5 year old GMC truck over this whole fiasco. If anything else, a statement of not wanting to have anything to do with a GM based product.
I’ve been a big fan of GM for a long time, as I had a Chevy pickup prior, but this move by HopenChange⢠regime is utter BS.
BE A PATRIOT, BUY FORD or BMW or Toyota or any other company that still believes in capitalism.
Sad, really sad.
barack o’vomit mobile
The comments here demonstrate completely the lack of long term vision by GM that got thwm where they are in the first place. Who’s going to buy a car made by GM (already a questionable purchase) which is owned by the government? Seriously, has the brain trust at the top of GM seriously thought this through? Have they thought past just the bankruptcy part? Who wants to own a car from a company that has a bad rep to begin with and is majority owned by Obama, Geithner, and Bernanke?
Same goes for Chrysler, though Union ownership is even more repulsive. I’m in the market for an SUV and I like the Cherokee’s but no way am I buying one now.
OK now I’m pissed. Is Barry warranteeing my warranty or not? WTF??
I wonder if they will come with 24″ rims and an obongo dash bobble head from now on