While Barack Obama repeatedly claims credit for supposedly
saving the auto industry (a bogus claim if there ever were one),
the dark side of his actions are increasingly coming out. The true
scandal starting to get more attention, in part thanks to the
efforts of Speaker John Boehner, is the way the administration
wiped out pensions for workers who were non-members of the United
Auto Workers at the Delphi auto plant in Ohio, while saving the
pensions for UAW members. Here’s a Washington Free
Beacon story about it. And the Detroit News
covers it here:
Troy-based Delphi, while in bankruptcy in 2009, terminated the
pension plans of 70,000 people and left a $7.2 billion shortfall.
… In a move that’s brought harsh criticism from Congress,
GM topped up the pensions of most union Delphi hourly workers and
retirees, largely those of the United Auto Workers union, at a cost
of $1 billion.
GM said it took the action because it had agreed to do so as
part of the 1999 spinoff — even though it wasn’t legally obligated
to do so during the bankruptcy.
GM did not do the same for Delphi’s 20,000 salaried retirees and
pension participants. The automaker also didn’t agree to top up
pensions of smaller unions.
And “in a growing scandal,” Liz Peek at the
Fiscal Times says, “Obama’s former auto czar and two
Treasury officials appear implicated in the decision to eliminate
the pensions of 20,000 non-union workers at GM’s Delphi unit,
while protecting benefits for UAW members.”
Let Freedom Ring has aired several web ads about the
topic,
and related
General/Govenrment Motors stuff, including investments in
Chinese Communist propaganda films. Moving stuff.
But it’s not just Delphi. As the Wall Street Journal reported in
a
lengthy story back in April, the workers at a highly successful
GM plant in Moraine, OH didn’t just lose their pensions; they lost
their jobs — again, because they were not members of the UAW.
Despite being one of GM’s most productive and cooperative
factories, Moraine was closed following the company’s 2007 labor
pact with the United Auto Workers union. Under a deal struck by the
UAW during GM’s bankruptcy two years later, Moraine’s 2,500
laid-off workers were barred from transferring to other plants,
locking them out of the industry’s rebound.
The trouble with Moraine: Its workers weren’t in the UAW.
This comes on top of a raft of politically inspired dealership
closures forced during the bailout — based not on which
dealerships were profitable, but which had the better political
connections.
And, of course, the unions were given huge ownership stakes in
GM and Chrysler, while secured creditors were
illegally given pennies on the dollar. Meanwhile, taxpayers
have lost something like
$25 billion on the bailout, with no chance of recouping it, and
also lost
a few billion dollars on “green energy” boondoggles to
politically connected cronies.
Seton Motley of the “Less Government” organization has been
keeping tabs on all this, by the way, at the Breitbart
site.
Every one of the stories linked in the above text, by the way,
have truly bothersome details in them about crony capitalism and
union favoritism run amuck.
The Delphi and Moraine stories, especially, should be continuing
major news stories in the next few weeks — if the media has any
integrity at all. (Yeah, right.)
JD| 10.25.12 @ 4:53PM
Don't use the Left's euphemism for fascism "crony capitalism". That's their dishonest attempt to make it sound like the Right's fault. It's the Left's fault, entirely, and it is fascism, definitionally.
Butch| 10.25.12 @ 5:21PM
The Chrysler "bankruptcy," particularly the rape of the Chrysler bondholders, showed me that we were now in China. When asked why they wouldn't hear the bondholders' case, one of the Supremes responded weakly that it was "too late." It will be too late for all of us unless we can pull this election off.
JD: I consider the Chinese economic model to be basically fascist. Agree or disagree?
JmsA| 10.25.12 @ 7:10PM
Correct: The Chicom economic model is essentially fascist for such is the only viable model in a totalitarian political system, versus the failure that was the centralized Soviet economic system.
geronl| 10.25.12 @ 9:11PM
When everyone is working 24 hours a week and get no benefits and paying fines for not having insurance, while Medicare refuses to pay for your hospital trips... just know that Obama is God and your first lover all rolled into one.
/sarcasm
Oldefarte| 10.26.12 @ 7:31PM
"appear implicated"? Thas a joke, right? Shal I say AND THE COW JUMPED OVER THE MOON? Of course they were not only implicated, but involved up to their sorry eyelids in this political corruption. Romney said correctly his preference for a managed bankruptcy, ie one where the UAW labor unions would have been cut out of same and told to GTH, while the workers would have kept their jobs [although with reduced salaries/benefits involving the unions excessive wage scales]. An althernative solution could have occurred by which the Japanese etc car manufacturers could have bought out Detroit's and again, the workers still would have been unscathed employment-wise. This auto bailout was nothin more than a political payoff to the UAW labor unions at taxpayers' expense, period. Left unsaid here is that original TARP's financials have entirely repaid back their loans with sizable interest to the government, whereas these car manufacturers still owe [and will never repay] the taxpayers $20 million, which is exclusive of the other losses detailed by this article!!!!!
handsoff| 10.28.12 @ 1:30AM
Oldefarte: I couldn't express it better, though I believe that we taxpayers lost a great deal more than 20 mill. BTW, I was a bondholder in GM and I lost, illegally, all my retirement funds so invested ( a lot!!) I resent and protest the pro union bias.