Guv’mint Motors (as they pronounce it here in the South), which
today
is pretending along with the Feds that it is emerging from
bankruptcy (if it really was, why does the government need to
own 60 percent of it?), is now seeking permission from the court
to break its contract with a U.S.-based precious metals mining
company so it can instead purchase from foreign ones. The
Billings Gazette
sez:
After nine months of negotiations with General Motors Corp.,
Stillwater Mining Co. officials learned Wednesday the automaker
had petitioned bankruptcy court to reject the existing contract
between the two companies.
Should the court accept GM’s petition, Stillwater would be hit
with a financial impact estimated between $5 million and $10
million.
Stillwater intends to file an objection to GM’s petition with
the bankruptcy court but does not know when to expect a
response….
“We certainly recognize that the current economic downturn has
decimated the automotive industry, forcing GM and others to
make some difficult choices,” (Stillwater Chairman Francis)
McAllister said. “At the same time, it seems disingenuous to
me, during a period when preserving American jobs is such a
high domestic priority, that GM, while receiving immense
financial support from the U.S. government, would elect, as I
understand it, to continue its supply agreements with foreign
palladium suppliers while seeking to terminate an agreement
with the sole U.S. miner of palladium.”
McAllister said they have contacted Montana’s congressional
delegation and will soon meet with employees and union
representatives to discuss the urgency of the situation.
So many questions, so many conflicts, so many grey areas…Whose
union jobs do you protect — the mining company’s or the
autoworkers’? Do you find the best metals price to protect U.S.
taxpayers/investors, or do you preserve the integrity of the
existing contract? Free trade or protectionism?
I thought this takeover was supposed to make things easier.