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Think Progress

December 4, 2008

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, and Ryan Powers

ECONOMY

Auto Rescue, Take Two

Last month, the CEOs from Detroit's Big Three automakers -- General Motors (GM), Ford, and Chrysler -- came to Washington, D.C. to ask Congress for a $25 billion loan to help their struggling companies stay afloat and avoid potential collapse. However, what began as a legitimate call for help turned into a fiasco, starting with the revelation that the companies' chief executives traveled to the nation's capital in private jets -- separately. Moreover, none had an actual plan of what he would do with the requested funds. As House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) explained, "Until they show us the plan, we cannot show them the money." Just yesterday, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) expressed pessimism that Congress would dole out the funds to Detroit. "I just don't think we have the votes to do that now," he said. Indeed, a new CNN poll out yesterday found that 61 percent of Americans oppose any taxpayer rescue. But today, the Big Three's leaders return to Capitol Hill, this time having submitted detailed plans of action. They even ditched their private jets, instead opting to drive to Washington in their respective companies' hybrid cars (a move one political commentator called "a little hokey"). Their combined plans call for nearly $10 billion more than the amount previously sought, with GM and Chrysler asking for $4 and $7 billion respectively now just to stay above water. Ford has indicated it can survive through 2009 but that "it wanted $9 billion in loans to draw upon if necessary." Nevertheless, Detroit has shown some progress. The Big Three plan to cut jobs, reduce employee benefits, eliminate factories and dealerships and purge or sell unsuccessful brands (for example, the Hummer). The CEOs also agreed to work for $1 per year and reduce executive pay. But for any rescue to be awarded and successful, the federal government should work to address rising health care costs and Detroit's automakers must make good on promises to increase fuel economy and adhere to strict environmental standards.

UNIONS TO MAKE CONCESSIONS:  Last month, United Automobile Workers (UAW) President Ron Gettelfinger noted that labor costs make up just 8 percent to 10 percent of the cost of a vehicle and that the focus of an auto industry rescue "has to be on the economy as a whole as opposed to a UAW contract." But in a major shift, he said yesterday that the UAW is willing to make major concessions in its contracts to help the Big Three lobby Congress for the $34 billion in aid, a move that could swing some in Congress to sign on. Gettelfinger said "the union would suspend the much-criticized 'jobs bank' program, which allows laid-off workers to continue drawing nearly full wages." "This should be interpreted as a meaningful and a painful sacrifice," said Harley Shaiken, a labor relations professor at the University of California at Berkeley. The jobs bank was "something the union worked over decades to achieve." Because health care represents a significant portion of U.S. automakers' costs, Gettelfinger also said the UAW would "agree to delay the multibillion-dollar payments to a new retiree health care fund that the automakers were scheduled to start making next year."

DETROIT'S HEALTH CARE BURDEN: The growing burden of providing health care benefits has contributed significantly to U.S. automakers' dwindling profits. Health care costs add $1,525 to the price tag of every GM vehicle. In 2007, the company paid more for health care than it did for steel. Indeed, billionaire businessman and philanthropist Warren Buffet has called GM "a health and benefits company with an auto company attached." Detroit's soaring health care costs make American automobiles less competitive because companies such as Toyota and Honda benefit from Japan's universal health care system. For example, Toyota "paid $1,400 less per vehicle on health care" and makes $2,400 more per car than American manufacturers. In fact, in June 2005, despite strong competition from U.S. states, the company chose to locate a new plant in Ontario, Canada, citing the country's national health service serving as a "big selling point." The fractured U.S. health care system inflates health care costs and expects U.S. automakers and other businesses to pick up the tab. Thus, this system not only reduces profitability, but decreases competitive advantages and drives away jobs.

THE GREEN CHALLENGE: Last month, Reid and Pelosi argued that any federal aid to the Big Three automakers should come with "strong conditions" such as requirements that automakers manufacture more fuel efficient vehicles. As a result, in their plans submitted to Congress this week, Ford and GM offered ideas to significantly increase their fleets' fuel economy; Chrysler's plan was less detailed. Ford committed to increase the fuel economy of its entire fleet by more than one-third by 2016. While GM plans to focus on hybrid and electric vehicles to increase its cars' mileage, the company's strategy also relies heavily on flex fuel technology, developing cars that can run on gasoline or E85 -- a mix of 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline. While this will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and dependence of foreign oil in theory, the reality is that E85 is mostly unavailable throughout most of the country. Any such plan would have to be accompanied by a pledge by oil companies to dramatically increase E85 availability. In its plan, Ford called for a nationwide fuel economy standard, which is code for opposition to California's groundbreaking greenhouse gas emission standards that would reduce vehicle pollution 30 percent by 2016. Sixteen other states have adopted California's rule. Ford argues that the patchwork of standards raises costs "with little or no environmental benefit." As Center for American Progress Action Fund Senior Fellow Daniel J. Weiss noted, the Big Three should adopt California's standard because its program "would spur innovations that further reduce vehicle emissions. There would be worldwide demand for such super-clean cars, creating new marketing opportunities."

UNDER THE RADAR

ADMINISTRATION -- PERINO CAN'T EXPLAIN WHY BUSH OPPOSES CLUSTER BOMB TREATY: Yesterday, in Oslo, Norway, over 100 countries began signing the Convention on Cluster Munitions. These nations argue that the unexploded munitions pose a "deadly hazard to children, farmers and others long after a conflict ends." In a last-minute change of policy, Afghanistan agreed to join the ban, a decision that "appeared to reflect [President Hamid] Karzai's growing independence from the Bush administration," as the United States and Russia, meanwhile, remain two of the treaty's key holdouts. During a White House press briefing yesterday, veteran reporter Helen Thomas pressed spokeswoman Dana Perino to explain the Bush administration's opposition to the ban. Perino simply replied, "What I have forgotten is all the reasons why, and so I'll get it for you." When Perino was asked about the administration's position on the treaty last May, she stressed the importance of cleaning up the munitions but not ending the practice. "We are deeply concerned about the humanitarian impact, not only of just cluster munitions, but really the whole range of munitions that are used at war," she said. "It's a moral obligation to clean up, and we do so."

ENVIRONMENT -- GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS SURGE IN 2007: According to a new release from the Energy Information Administration, "U.S. greenhouse gas emissions in 2007 were 1.4 percent above the 2006 total." This increase erases the 1 percent drop in emissions in 2006, for which Bush claimed credit, even though the decrease was due to an unusually warm winter and high fuel prices. "I was pleased to receive the Energy Information Administration's final report today, which includes U.S. greenhouse gas emissions for 2006. The final report shows that emissions declined 1.5 percent from the 2005 level," he said at the time. U.S. annual emissions are now 17 percent greater than they were in 1990. "As an important aside, the main reason emissions growth haven't been even faster under Bush is that he's had two economic slowdowns, 9/11 (which severely depressed air travel), record fossil fuel prices for much of his term, and a rapidly growing trade deficit with China," notes the Center for American Progress's Joe Romm. To avoid catastrophic climate change, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects that "industrialized countries would need to reduce emissions by 25 percent to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020."

MEDIA -- MEDIA DEFAULT TO JOHN BOLTON FOR CRITICISM OF OBAMA'S U.N. PICK: Last Monday, President-elect Obama announced the nomination of his campaign's senior foreign policy adviser Susan Rice as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. Obama added that he would restore Rice's position to Cabinet-level rank, as it had been during the Clinton administration. But in searching for an alternative perspective of this decision, it appears that some in the media became lazy. Instead of providing a thoughtful counterpoint from a respected and credible voice, the easy route seems to be just to quote U.N. basher John Bolton. The New York Times featured Bolton saying that "it was unwise to elevate the position to the cabinet again," while USA Today quoted him attacking the institution of the U.N. Naturally, Fox News gave air time to Bolton, who, having once served as U.S. ambassador to the world body himself, offered Rice some advice: U.N. ambassadors "are not sent to New York to be platonic guardians with other ambassadors for the good of the world." Bolton famously said that "there is no such thing as the United Nations," and if the U.N. building in New York "lost ten stories, it wouldn’t make a bit of difference." Not only that, but Bolton once boasted that he never took any international law classes while attending Yale Law School.


THINK FAST

Attorney General Michael Mukasey said yesterday that he sees no reason for prosecutions or for pardons for those who gave legal advice on the Bush administration's terrorism policies. "There is absolutely no evidence" that legal opinions on surveillance or interrogation policy were issued "for any reason other than to protect the security of the country," claimed Mukasey.

House and Senate leaders are taking up legislation to cut the future pay of Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) and other members of Congress nominated by President-elect Barack Obama. The Emoluments Clause of the Constitution prohibits new appointees from "serving in a confirmable position within the executive branch if that position has had its pay increased while they were serving in Congress."

Chris Matthews is being advised to resign his post at MSNBC as soon as possible if he is serious about running for the U.S. Senate in Pennsylvania. Despite the fact that Matthews is currently looking for a house in the state, some at NBC believe Matthews's potential candidacy is simply a "negotiating ploy to jack up his contract."

While the auto industry is arguing to Congress that it needs a financial bailout to avoid recession, CBS News reports that automakers spent nearly $50 million lobbying lawmakers in the first nine months of the year, along with another $15 million in campaign contributions.

In a surprise move, the United Auto Workers announced yesterday that the union would make major concessions in its contracts with the big three auto companies to help them lobby Congress for federal aid. The union said "members were willing to sacrifice job security provisions and financing for retiree health care" to keep GM and Chrysler out of bankruptcy.

Environmentalists began an online campaign yesterday "urging President-elect Barack Obama to undo a new federal rule that clarifies when coal companies can dump mining waste in streams." The group Appalachian Voices and others say that the EPA's endorsement of the rule on Tuesday will be "the death of freshwater streams and the probable start of a new surge in mountaintop removal surface mining."

President-elect Obama "is making clearer than ever that tens of thousands of American troops will be left behind in Iraq, even if he can make good on his campaign promise to pull all combat forces out within 16 months." Obama has not publicly set a firm number for how large the "residual force" will be.

Microsoft founder Bill Gates "said the federal government must increase deficit spending to stimulate the economy and help the country's most vulnerable residents." We should have a bigger goal than getting the economy growing again," Gates said in a speech at George Washington University. "I think we should expand the number of people who are contributing to the economy and benefiting from it."

Treasury Secretary nominee Tim Geithner "is seeking to push Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair out of office." Geithner argues that "Bair isn't a team player and is too focused on protecting her agency rather than the financial system as a whole." The Obama team says Bair "won't play a central role in policy."

And finally: After Gov. Sarah Palin's (R-AK) embarrassing conversation with a radio host pretending to be French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R-FL) wasn't going to take any chances after someone called her saying he was Barack Obama. Ros-Lehtinen said, "I'm sorry but I think this is a joke from one of the South Florida radio stations known for these pranks" and hung up. When Obama's chief of staff Rahm Emanuel called, Ros-Lehtinen again hung up. Only after a call from her friend Rep. Howard Berman (D-CA) did Ros-Lehtinen finally realize her mistake. When Obama finally reached the congresswoman, he assured her that he thought the whole incident was "funny."



GOOD NEWS

"The first solar-powered car to travel around the world ended its journey at the U.N. climate talks Thursday, arriving with the message that clean technologies are available now to stop global warming."

BLOG WATCH

THINK PROGRESS: Al Gore leads new "Reality" Coalition to debunk "clean coal" myth.

WONK ROOM: Restoring America's academic competitive edge.

PUSHBACK: Is the path to gender pay equity through unionization?

KEVIN DRUM: Will good news out of Iraq cause people to get overly optimistic about the prospects for counterinsurgency in general?

STATE WATCH

ARKANSAS: New law that bars unmarried adults from adopting or fostering children targets gay couples.

CALIFORNIA: Economic status and religious convictions drove whether voters supported Prop. 8, according to new poll.

UTAH: Conservative state senator proposes resolution mandating retailers use "Merry Christmas."

INDIANA
: "Backers of a constitutional ban on gay marriage plan to reintroduce the proposal in next year's legislature."

DAILY GRILL

"If you don't listen to talk radio, if you don't watch the FOX News Channel, you're not anywhere nearly as informed."
-- Sean Hannity, 12/2/08

VERSUS

"Eighty percent of Fox viewers were found to hold at least one misperception, compared to 23 percent of NPR/PBS consumers. ... As to the number of misconceptions held by their audiences, Fox far outscored all of its rivals.''
-- Asia Times, 10/4/03, on a University of Maryland study

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