WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama pushed a humbled General Motors Corp. into bankruptcy on Monday and said the federal government will act as "reluctant shareholder" when it assumes a 60 percent ownership of the smaller carmaker that emerges.
The president said he hopes GM -- once a proud symbol of American capitalism -- would emerge quickly from bankruptcy court, and pledged up to $30 billion in additional federal assistance to help it get on its feet.
The government's partial stake in GM comes on top of a far smaller ownership of Chrysler LLC, as well as significant federal equity in banks, the AIG insurance giant and two mortgage industry titans -- all victims of an economic crisis unrivaled since the Great Depression.
Republicans lobbed questions in Obama's direction even before he finished speaking.
"The only thing it makes clear is that the government is firmly in the business of running companies using taxpayer dollars," said House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio.
"Does anyone really believe that politicians and bureaucrats in Washington can successfully steer a multinational corporation to economic viability? It's time for the administration to fully explain what the exit strategy is to get the U.S. government out of the board room once and for all," Boehner said.
But the president said the actions were part of a "viable, achievable plan that will give this iconic company a chance to rise again."
Speaking at the White House, where he was flanked by Cabinet secretaries and top economic advisers, he added, "What I am not doing, what I have no interest in doing, is running GM."
The president said auto executives "will call the shots and make the decisions about turning this company around." He said the government would refrain from playing a management role in all but the most critical areas.
"Our goal is to help GM get back on its feet ... and get out quickly," he said of the federal government.
Neither Obama nor his spokesman offered an indication of how long the government's involvement would last. "I don't know that there is a timeline," said Robert Gibbs, the White House press secretary.
The carmaker's CEO, Fritz Henderson, said at a news conference in New York, "This new GM will be built from the strongest parts of our business, including our best brands and products." He took over at the helm of the firm with the approval of the Obama administration, which engineered the ouster of his predecessor, Rick Wagoner.
Obama spoke as GM entered bankruptcy court at the same time Chrysler was looking to emerge after a two-month reorganization. Over the weekend, a bankruptcy judge gave the No. 3 automaker approval to sell most of its assets to Italy's Fiat, part of a plan under which the U.S. government will own somewhat less than 10 percent of the firm.
Ford Motor Co., the other large U.S. automaker, has said it can weather the current economic and industry crises on its own.
Obama said the coming restructuring will "take a painful toll on many Americans." GM announced during the day that it would permanently close nine more plants and idle three others, steps affecting as many as 20,000 workers.
Obama cited Chrysler's experience in bankruptcy court as a model of how GM could fare.
"Some said a quick bankruptcy was impossible ... they were wrong," he said.
He added that unnamed critics predicted car sales would "fall off a cliff," and added, "they were wrong." Chrysler sold more cars in May than it did in April.
The outcome, he said, is "dramatically better than the one we found when we began."
Looking ahead, he said, GM will be prodded at every juncture by the administration's top officials.
The announcement marked the latest step in a series of measures Obama has taken since he became president to salvage an industry that has been part of the American landscape for a century.
Earlier in the year, he rejected a restructuring plan submitted by GM's ownership, and ordered its leaders to try again. They did, under the direction of administration officials, and the result is a blueprint in which hundreds of dealerships will be closed and familiar model names jettisoned. Officials have estimated the new GM should be profitable when Americans are buying about 10 million vehicles a year. The company that entered bankruptcy court needed U.S. auto sales to stay at an estimated 16 million units a year to make a profit.
Obama stressed that GM's workers and its investors had both made sacrifices. The United Autoworkers Union agreed in recent days to numerous concessions, and a majority of investors agreed to accept less than the paper value of their holdings. The administration, sensitive to charges that it favored the UAW, said the terms accepted by the unions were harsher than what had been proposed by the Bush administration.
Obama's assurances about a temporary federal ownership were seconded by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., who said the president's "decision to take a short-term stake in General Motors is driven by our nation's shared interest in ensuring the American auto industry can survive."
Interest in Congress was intense, though, and the Senate Commerce Committee announced it was summoning top executives from GM and Chrysler to a hearing on Wednesday into their firms' plans to close hundreds of dealerships as part of an industry restructuring.
Chrysler has said it will close nearly 800 dealerships. GM has disclosed plans to shutter about 1,100.
Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:
For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.