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Pelosi,
LaHood
laud US
investment
in autos
By KEN
THOMAS
Associated
Press
Writer
House
Speaker
Nancy
Pelosi
and top
Obama
administration
officials
defended
last
year's
federal
bailout
of the
auto
industry
on
Monday,
citing
optimism
that
General
Motors
and
Chrysler
had made
strides
only
months
after
exiting
bankruptcy.
"What we
see here
today is
a
renaissance,"
Pelosi
said. "A
renaissance,
a
phoenix
— a
rebirth."
Pelosi,
D-Calif.,
and more
than a
dozen
lawmakers
traveled
to the
auto
industry's
annual
showcase,
inspecting
General
Motors'
Chevrolet
Volt, a
plug-in
electric
vehicle,
engine
technologies
under
development
by
Chrysler
LLC and
its
Italian
partner,
Fiat
Group
SpA, and
fuel-sipping
small
cars
from
Ford
Motor
Co.
Transportation
Secretary
Ray
LaHood,
who also
toured
the
show,
said the
administration
made the
right
decision
to save
GM,
Chrysler
and auto
lender
GMAC
Financial
Services
with
about
$80
billion
in aid,
along
with a
separate
$3
billion
Cash for
Clunkers
program
that
boosted
auto
sales
during
last
summer's
doldrums.
"This
was a
good
investment
of
taxpayer
dollars
in an
industry
that
needed a
little
bit of
an
infusion
of
resources,"
LaHood
said. He
noted
that GM,
which
received
about
$50
billion
in aid,
had
recently
repaid
the
government
$1
billion
in loans
and was
showing
signs of
recovery.

U.S. Department of
Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, speaks at the North
American International Auto Show Monday, Jan. 11, 2010 in
Detroit.
(Photo
by HB
Meeks/Tell
Us USA
News
Network)
Shiny
new cars
and
trucks
usually
command
all the
attention
at the
auto
show,
but
Pelosi
and her
congressional
delegation
was
mobbed
by
dozens
of
reporters,
cameramen
and
hovering
boom
microphones
as they
toured
the
vehicle
displays.
Pelosi's
trip was
aimed at
showing
support
and
optimism
for the
auto
industry
and
Michigan,
which
has been
ravaged
by the
economic
downturn.
GM and
Chrysler
were
forced
into
bankruptcy
and many
automakers
and
suppliers
faced
painful
job
losses
and a
sharp
decline
in auto
sales.
Michigan's
jobless
rate has
hovered
around
15
percent
and the
state
has held
the
nation's
highest
unemployment
rate for
much of
the past
four
years.
"I see a
lot of
flickers
of hope
here,"
said
Labor
Secretary
Hilda
Solis.
During a
luncheon
with
Michigan
Gov.
Jennifer
Granholm,
Detroit
Mayor
Dave
Bing,
lawmakers
and
industry
officials,
Pelosi
acknowledged
that the
government's
intervention
in GM
and
Chrysler
and the
economic
stimulus
was met
with
resistance.
But
Pelosi
and
others
said it
was
critical
to
preserving
the
nation's
manufacturing
base and
developing
renewable
energy
sources.
Pelosi
said she
planned
to
return
to
Detroit
for the
2011
auto
show to
chart
carmakers'
progress.
The U.S.
government
owns
about 61
percent
of
General
Motors
and
nearly
10
percent
of
Chrysler.
GM has
said it
will
repay
nearly
$7
billion
in loans
by June
and is
working
to
conduct
a public
stock
offering,
which
could
lead to
the
repayment
of some
of the
billions.
Government
watchdogs
have
expressed
doubt
that the
government
will get
all its
money
back.
The
Congressional
Oversight
Panel
reviewing
the $700
billion
Troubled
Asset
Relief
Program
said
last
year
that
most of
the $23
billion
initially
provided
to GM
and
Chrysler
was
unlikely
to be
repaid.
Pelosi
said GM
chairman
and
interim
CEO Ed
Whitacre
Jr.
assured
her that
"he's a
taxpayer
and he
wants
his
money
back. We
feel
that
we're on
the
right
path
now. I
think
this
represents
real
change."
Whitacre
has
projected
a
positive
outlook
for the
company,
telling
reporters
last
week
that GM
could be
profitable
this
year
depending
on
economic
factors.
"We're
going to
make you
proud,"
Whitacre
told
Pelosi.
"You're
going to
like
what we
do."
Providing
more
help,
the
Energy
Department
announced
$187
million
in
funding
for
projects
to boost
the fuel
efficiency
of
heavy-duty
trucks
and
passenger
vehicles.
General
Motors,
Chrysler
and Ford
Motor
Co. were
among
the
beneficiaries.
Government
leaders
took a
prominent
role on
the
first
day of
the
North
American
International
Auto
Show, a
major
industry
showcase
with
wall-to-wall
vehicle
unveilings
and
thousands
of
journalists.
The
government's
influence
was
apparent
— even a
local
coffee
company
served
"organic
bailout
blend"
in the
media
lounge.
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