How Barstool's Dave Portnoy Handled This Ambush by a Local News Outlet
Washington Post Reporter Whiffs With This Tweet About 'Sovereignty' Winning Kentucky Derby
This Headline Sort of Guts The Washington Post's Pulitzer Win for Covering the...
If There's Anyone That Deserves a Military Parade, It's Donald J. Trump
Can We Pay Liberals to Leave Too?
Young Trumpian Conservatives Are Like the Young Reagan Conservatives of Yesterday
Price Controls for Medicine Have a Devastating Cost
'Trump Knows…' Eclipses the Iconic Bo Jackson Commercial 'Bo Knows…'
Can the West Win Wars Again?
Securing Digital Dignity: A New Line of Defense for Americans
Ignore the Elites — President Trump’s Housing Plan Is Working
From the Gridiron to the Rose Garden — America’s Comeback Starts Here
Small Businesses Aren’t Hiring - Because Big Cronyism Is Eliminating Them
WNBA Player Bows to Woke Agenda, Cries 'White Privilege' Despite Being No. 1...
Pete Buttigieg Said What About Black Babies?
OPINION

The Big Three Master Fearmongering

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

Big Three automakers say if the U.S. government doesn’t hand over $34 billion tax dollars to their companies the U.S. economy will almost certainly collapse.

Officials from General Motors, Chrysler and Ford are using words like “catastrophic” and “depression” to describe the nation’s economic future if lawmakers refuse to give their companies a bailout.

Advertisement

Each of the Big Three CEO’s told Congress last month their companies required a massive infusion of tax dollars in order to keep operating and insisted they would not consider bankruptcy. They were sent home with instructions from Democratic leadership to come up with their own specific bailout plans that will be presented to Congress on Thursday.

GM submitted a 37-page to Congress in advance of CEO Rick Wagoner’s testimony to justify the $18 billion their company is seeking is assistance on Tuesday. Their proposal said “Absent such assistance, the company will default in the near term, very likely precipitating a total collapse of the domestic industry and its extensive supply chain, with a ripple effect that will have severe, long-term consequences to the U.S. economy.”

The report went on to say, “A failure by GM would trigger catastrophic damage to the U.S. economy” that would leave up to 3 million Americans jobless.

GM’s report, like Chrysler’s and Ford’s, read like a business proposal. It went to great lengths to explain all of the negative impacts of business failure, but gave no attention to the economic impacts of forcing taxpayers to keep failing companies alive.

Advertisement

Chrysler’s Vice Chairman James Press told the Associated Press in an interview “If we have a catastrophic failure of one of these car companies, in this tender environment for the economy, it's a huge blow. It could trigger a depression." Chrysler officials say more than 200,000 of their employees would lose their jobs immediately if their company was liquidated

His company is seeking $7 billion in government loans.

Ford officials are asking for a government line of credit worth $9 billion. Their 37-page plan to Congress says their company’s economic outlook is closely tied to GM and Chrysler’s. “Nearly 25 percent of Ford's top dealers also own GM and Chrysler franchises,” it said. “That is why the collapse of one or both of our domestic competitors would also threaten Ford.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement