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Think Progress

June 4, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Ali Frick, Ryan Powers, and Pat Garofalo

ECONOMY

The Present And Future Of GM

This week, auto giant General Motors (GM) followed Chrysler and filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, making it the fourth largest U.S. company to ever take such a step. As a result of the pre-packaged bankruptcy plan, the U.S. government will own a 60 percent stake in GM, with the United Auto Workers (UAW) receiving 17.5 percent, the Canadian government taking 12.5 percent, and GM's unsecured bondholders taking 10 percent. In order to finance its bankruptcy, "the fallen icon of American industry will rely on $30 billion of additional financial assistance from the Treasury Department and $9.5 billion from Canada," which is in addition to the $20 billion GM had previously received in low interest loans from the Bush administration. As the American Prospect's Harold Meyerson put it, government investment "was simply the one course available to avert an economic holocaust in the Midwest (not just in Michigan but in Ohio, Indiana, and other states as well) that would plunge the nation deeper into recession." Of course, this hasn't stopped conservatives from claiming that the bankruptcy plan puts the U.S. "on the road toward socialism."

WHY BANKRUPTCY NOW?: In an interview Tuesday with Fox News's Greta Van Susteren, Vice President Cheney admitted that the Bush administration deliberately decided to pass the buck on GM, giving the company a bridge loan and then leaving the problem for Obama. Other prominent Republicans, like Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele, responded to Obama's plan by saying that the company should simply "go into the market, they work out their situation in the market." But the Obama administration's packaged bankruptcy makes sense for both GM and the country's economic stability. Without the government financing its bankruptcy, GM "would have ended up in liquidation, shedding 60,000 hourly jobs instead of 20,000" and selling assets at firesale prices. And as the New Republic's Jonathan Cohn wrote, "the pain wouldn't have stopped there. It would have spread to GM's suppliers and, eventually, to all of the communities where these workers spend money." By delaying bankruptcy, the administration was able to announce that it would back GM's warranties, set plans to close dealerships, allow suppliers time to diversify, and work out a deal to ensure that autoworkers received some of the benefits and pensions that they earned. As economist Dean Baker explained, "back in December and January, when none of these pieces were in place, there was still enough up in the air that I think it would have been reckless to have done a bankruptcy."

THE PLIGHT OF THE BONDHOLDERS: A favorite conservative reaction to the GM bankruptcy has been to claim that it unfairly benefits unions and violates the rights of GM's bondholders. A group of Republican House members said that "the proposal seems to favor the rights and claims of the UAW, a political ally of the current administration...over the rights and claims of the company's diverse group of bondholders." Some have even gone so far as to claim that the administration's plan is illegal. Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA) said that "the White House [is] coming in and favoring the UAW, basically making the rights of the bondholders inferior, outside any kind of legal framework whatsoever. There has been a downright suspension of the law." But, as the Washington Post noted, "[T]here are a number of precedents for retiree health funds getting preferential treatment during bankruptcies, particularly in the steel industry in recent years." It's also likely that the GM bondholders would get no more in liquidation than they are getting under the current plan, which may be why a majority of bondholders (54 percent) support the plan. And as for the claims of illegality, Reuters's Felix Salmon pointed out that an unsecured bondholder "has no 'legal right' to get exactly the same outcome as any other creditor." "[I]f the bondholders have a better idea of what's fair, they're more than welcome to provide tens of billions of dollars in debtor-in-possession financing in order to make that happen. But of course they're not willing to put in so much as a nickel, which means that it's not up to them," Salmon wrote.

A RESPONSIBLE EXIT STRATEGY:  House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) responded to the GM plan by saying "the only thing it makes clear is that the government is firmly in the business of running companies using taxpayer dollars." However, according to the New York Times, "[A] quick restructuring appears possible" precisely because of the agreements brokered by the administration with the union and GM's bondholders. As Obama said, "GM will be run by a private board of directors and management team with a track record in American manufacturing that reflects a commitment to innovation and quality. They -- and not the government -- will call the shots and make the decisions about how to turn this company around." Reuters noted that the administration has "created safeguards to prevent interference, including prohibiting government officials from sitting on the firm's board or working for firms in which the automaker invests." Steve Rattner, head of the Obama administration's auto task force, said that GM's shares will be sold off in a series of transactions over the next 12 to 18 months in order "to maximize the return" for taxpayers. "Obviously we could exit tomorrow if we wanted to by handing out shares at the corner of Pennsylvania and 17th or selling them for a dollar, but we have a huge amount of taxpayer money here," Rattner said. "But while we want to exit as soon as possible, we also want to exit as soon as practicable in terms of being good custodians of the taxpayers' money."

UNDER THE RADAR

ENVIRONMENT -- TODD STERN ARGUES THAT U.S. AND CHINA NEED A 'COLLABORATIVE PARTNERSHIP ON CLIMATE CHANGE': Yesterday, Todd Stern, the U.S. special envoy for climate change, spoke on the special challenges and opportunities for building an international climate change agreement with China, the world's top emitter of global warming pollution. In a speech at the Center for American Progress, where he had been a senior fellow before his appointment to the State Department, Stern explained, "The status quo is unsustainable and that developing countries like China need to commit to measurable change. "China, and other developing countries, do not need to take the same actions that developed countries are taking, but they do need to take significant national actions that they commit to -- internationally -- that they quantify, and that are ambitious enough to be broadly consistent with the lessons of science," Stern said. He also offered "high praise for the [Waxman-Markey] climate and energy bill set to go to a vote before the U.S. House of Representatives this summer," which he said "'is enormously ambitious' and brings together 'science and pragmatism.'" "Let's get this damn thing started," he quipped. In an interview with The Wonk Room, Stern explained why addressing climate change is so urgent today. "We're starting later. It's unfortunate, but it's just the reality. We can't rewrite the last eight years, so we're starting later," he said. (Watch the interview here.)


THINK FAST

In a speech today at Cairo University in Egypt, President Obama pledged to "seek a new beginning between the United States and Muslims around the world." Obama "was forceful and at times scolding as he promoted democracy in Egypt, sent a warning to Israelis against building new settlements, and acknowledged that the United States had fallen short of its ideals, particularly in the Iraq war."

 

Israel accused Obama yesterday of "failing to acknowledge what they called clear understandings with the Bush administration that allowed Israel to build West Bank settlement housing within certain guidelines while still publicly claiming to honor a settlement 'freeze.'" In 2003, Israel agreed to freeze "all settlement activity (including natural growth of settlements)."

Today, the Washington Post has an article about how progressive groups "are now ascendant, enjoying clout not seen in a generation and benefiting from close access to a White House brimming with former colleagues. Many of the groups spent the Bush years championing policies that had little chance of being adopted; now, their ideas and positions are at the center of the Washington debate."

"House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Wednesday issued an ultimatum to her committee chairmen: move climate change legislation by June 19 or risk losing jurisdiction over the bill." After the Energy and Commerce Committee approved the bill last month, Ways and Means Chairman Charlie Rangel (D-NY) and Agriculture Chairman Collin Peterson (D-MN) balked, seeking to delay or significantly alter the bill.

A federal judge threw out more than three dozen lawsuits yesterday claiming that the nation's major telecom companies had illegally assisted in President Bush's warrantless wiretapping program. The judge said that while the cases raised important constitutional issues, Congress had left no doubt about its "unequivocal intention" when it granted retroactive immunity to participants in the program.

Yesterday, Attorney General Eric Holder "overturned a Bush administration ruling in January that immigrants do not have a constitutional right to effective legal counsel in deportation proceedings."

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) has issued an order for the House to "begin posting representatives' expense reports online, giving the public easy access to records of the millions of dollars lawmakers spend on staff and items such as catering, cars, computers and TVs." Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) said that "he would introduce a bill requiring the expense records be posted online in the Senate, as well."

New Hampshire became the sixth state to approve marriage equality yesterday when Gov. John Lynch (D) signed a bill allowing gay couples to wed. The law, which bars "lawsuits against religious groups and workers if they refuse to participate in gay weddings or celebrations that go against their faiths," goes into effect Jan. 1, 2010.

Czech Interior Minister Martin Pecina, who chaired a meeting of the European Union's interior ministers, said today that EU countries are likely to take "several dozen" former prisoners from Guantanamo Bay. "It's hard to give numbers because that is up to member states, but I think several dozen people" could be admitted, Pecina said.

And finally: Disgraced former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich told a Chicago radio station earlier this week that he was "moved" when he saw his wife "eat a large, hairy spider on the premiere of NBC's 'I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!' He says she ate the unconventional snack because she loves her two young daughters."



BLOG WATCH

We need a "Green Bank" to finance America's conversion to clean energy.

The high cost of building mass transit can pay off in the end.

Israel's "natural growth" canard.

ABC thinks Sean Hannity's anti-Obama rants are news.

Activists and labor organizations unite to launch a national immigration reform campaign.

Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO) is against regulating greenhouse gases because he's worried the seasons will stop changing.

Marc Lynch thinks that Obama has "introduced a subtle and potentially extremely important shift into American discourse about Islamism."

New York Times reporter Andrew Ross Sorkin apologizes for claiming that there are no successful unionized companies.

DAILY GRILL

"[President] Obama Says U.S. Is a 'Muslim Country.'"
-- Fox Nation, 6/02/09

VERSUS

"[O]ne of the points I want to make is, is that if you actually took the number of Muslims Americans, we'd be one of the largest Muslim countries in the world."
-- Obama, 6/01/09


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