Rally focuses on workers
Auto dealers, suppliers gather to plead for jobs
BY TODD SPANGLER • FREE PRESS WASHINGTON STAFF • December 6, 2008
WASHINGTON -- Car dealers, parts makers, human resources officials and more -- coming in from dozens of states -- stood in the shadow of the nation's Capitol on Friday hoping to be heard by members of Congress.
These weren't the automakers pleading for help. These were the folks whose jobs might go away without them.
"They have to understand," said Kim Meltzer, a state representative from Clinton Township who runs a manufacturing company with her husband in Romeo, "without the auto industry here, there's no money for schools, no money for roads or infrastructure."
Meltzer, a Republican, took part in a morning rally supporting the automakers and their plea for a $34-billion lifeline from Congress. She was representing Michigan, like the others wearing a red, white and blue hockey jersey with the number of jobs believed to be on the line if Detroit's three automakers go belly-up.
All told, the group -- calling itself the Engine of Democracy Coalition -- says more than 6 million jobs could be at risk when you count the automakers, the dealers, the suppliers and all the jobs their failure could cost across the nation.
"One way or another," said Rep. Sander Levin, a Royal Oak Democrat who spoke at the rally and who has been a strong supporter of the auto industry's plans, "there will be a bridge loan because the alternative is really cataclysmic for this country."
But the group -- which grew out of an earlier effort to put together a caravan of supporters to drive to Washington, D.C., to bolster the carmakers' arguments (it was later deemed too difficult to organize) -- readily acknowledged they are facing a tough battle.
Many members of Congress remain cold to the idea of an auto industry rescue, worried that the money will do little to ensure the future of General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC, leaving the taxpayers holding the bag on bad loans. Others remember how much ire was directed at them a few months ago when they pushed for and eventually passed a $700-billion bailout for the nation's financial institutions...........
Should one or more of the automakers fail, hundreds of suppliers could be right behind them. Dealerships could collapse. And the money pumped into the economy by all those workers would dry up. Leuliette compared it to a tsunami rolling over the United States.
"It can be really bad," he said.