[StBernard] The Toyota Republicans

Westley Annis westley at da-parish.com
Tue Dec 16 14:24:05 EST 2008


The Toyota Republicans
by Patrick J. Buchanan (more by this author)
Posted 12/16/2008 ET




"GOP to Detroit: Drop Dead!"

So may have read the headline Friday, had not President Bush stepped in to
save GM, Ford and Chrysler, which Senate Republicans had just voted to send
to the knacker's yard.

What are Republicans thinking of, pulling the plug, at Christmas, on GM,
risking swift death for the greatest manufacturing company in American
history, a strategic asset and pillar of the U.S. economy.

The $14 billion loan to the Big Three that Republican senators filibustered
to death is just 2 percent of the $700 billion the Senate voted to bail out
Wall Street. Having gone along with bailouts of Bear Stearns, AIG, Fannie,
Freddie and CitiGroup, why refuse a reprieve to an industry upon which
millions of the best blue-collar jobs in America depend?

In a good year, Americans buy 17 million cars. A more populous EU probably
buys as many. Three billion people in India, Southeast Asia and China, four
times as many people as there are in the EU and United States, are moving
toward the middle class. They, too, will be wanting cars. And millions of
them love American cars.

Is the Republican Party so fanatic in its ideology that, rather than sin
against a commandment of Milton Friedman, it is willing to see America
written forever out of this fantastic market, let millions of jobs vanish
and write off the industrial Midwest?

So it would seem. "Companies fail every day, and others take their place,"
said Sen. Richard Shelby on "Face the Nation."

Presumably, the companies that will "take their place," when GM, Ford and
Chrysler die, are German, Japanese or Korean, like the ones lured into
Shelby's state of Alabama, with the bait of subsidies free-market
Republicans are supposed to abhor.

In 1993, Alabama put together a $258 million package to bring a Mercedes
plant in. In 1999, Honda was offered $158 million to build a plant there. In
2002, Alabama won a Hyundai plant by offering a $252 million subsidy.

"We have a number of profitable automakers in America, and they should not
be disadvantaged for making wise business decisions while failure is
rewarded," says Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina.

DeMint is referring to "profitable automakers" like BMW, which sited a plant
in Spartanburg, after South Carolina offered the Germans a $150 million
subsidy and $80 million to expand.

Be it BMW, Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Mazda, Mitsubishi or Hyundai, the South
has become a sanctuary for foreign assembly plants, for which Southern
states have been paying subsidies.

Fine. But why this "Let-them-eat-cake!" coldness toward U.S. auto companies?
General Motors employs more workers than all these foreign plants combined.
And, unlike Mitsubishi, General Motors didn't bomb Pearl Harbor.

Do these Southern senators understand why the foreign automakers suddenly up
and decided to build plants in the United States?

It was the economic nationalism of Ronald Reagan.

When an icon of American industry, Harley-Davidson, was being run out of
business by cutthroat Japanese dumping of big bikes to kill the "Harley
Hog," Reagan slapped 50 percent tariffs on their motorcycles and imposed
quotas on imported Japanese cars. Message to Tokyo. If you folks want to
keep selling cars here, start building them here.

Fear of Reaganism brought those foreign automakers, lickety-split, to
America's shores, not any love of Southern cooking.

Do the Republicans not yet understand how they lost the New Majority
coalition that gave them three landslides and five victories in six
presidential races from 1968 to 1988? Do they not know why the Reagan
Democrats in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan are going home?

The Republican Party gave their jobs away!

How? By telling U.S. manufacturers they could shut plants here, get rid of
their U.S. workers, build factories in Mexico, Asia or China, and ship their
products back, free of charge.

Republican globalists gave U.S. manufacturers every incentive to go abroad
and take their jobs with them, the jobs of Middle America.

And, for 30 years, that is what U.S. manufacturers have done, have been
forced to do, as their competitors closed down and moved their plants abroad
in search of low-wage Third World labor.

It's Herbert Hoover time in here, Vice President Cheney is said to have told
the Senate Republicans -- as they prepared to march out onto the floor and
turn thumbs down on any reprieve for General Motors.

In today's world, America faces nationalistic trade rivals who manipulate
currencies, employ nontariff barriers, subsidize their manufacturers, rebate
value-added taxes on exports to us and impose value-added taxes on imports
from us, all to capture our markets and kill our great companies. And we
have a Republican Party blissfully ignorant that we live in a world of us or
them. It doesn't even know who "us" is.

We need a new team on the field and a new coach who believes with Vince
Lombardi that "winning isn't everything. It's the only thing."




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