Obama: Nationalization of GM to be short-term

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Employees and customers watch President Barack Obama on television in the customer lounge at the Williamson Cadillac dealership in Miami Monday. The president said he hopes GM would emerge quickly from bankruptcy court, and pledged up to $30 billion in additional federal assistance to help it get on its feet. (AP photo)
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WASHINGTON – It was a line that resonated from the past: "What is good for General Motors and all who work there is good for the United States of America."

That was how President Barack Obama summed up a deal in which the government is taking a temporary 60 percent controlling interest in the humbled automaker as it filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday. It was a twist on a comment uttered by former GM President and Chief Executive Charles E. Wilson in 1953 when GM was the world's largest auto manufacturer and at the peak of its influence.

"What's good for General Motors is good for the United States" became a mantra for corporate bravado and hubris.

But Obama's use of it took on new meaning — now that the United States is actually the new owner of GM.

(Wilson, tapped by President Dwight Eisenhower to be defense secretary, actually told a congressional panel that "for years I thought what was good for our country was good for General Motors and vice versa.")

Obama ushered GM into bankruptcy protection and put the government behind the wheel of the company that once symbolized the nation's industrial might.

The fallen giant, the largest U.S. manufacturing company ever to enter bankruptcy, is shedding some 21,000 jobs and 2,600 dealers. Sparing few communities, the retrenchment amounts to one-third of its domestic work force and 40 percent of its dealerships.

"We are acting as reluctant shareholders because that is the only way to help GM succeed," Obama said of the temporary nationalization of the 100-year-old company.

Obama lauded what he called a "viable, achievable plan that will give this iconic American company a chance to rise again" as GM followed Chrysler LLC into bankruptcy court. Of Detroit's "Big Three" automakers, only Ford Motor Corp. has avoided bankruptcy restructuring and has not taken federal bailout money.

The prepackaged GM bankruptcy deal — crafted by the administration, the company, the United Auto Workers union and a group of bondholders — would give the U.S. government a 60 percent controlling stake in what was once the world's largest automaker. An additional 12.5 percent would be under Canadian government ownership.

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