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11:05 am: GM says CEO will drive to Washington

POSTED: December 2, 2008

DETROIT (AP) -- This time, GM Chief Rick Wagoner will drive a company car to Washington instead of flying by corporate jet as he seeks a government bailout, a spokesman says.

Wagoner will drive in a Chevrolet Malibu hybrid sedan when he makes the 520-mile trek from Detroit to Capitol Hill, General Motors Corp. spokesman Tony Cervone said Tuesday.

Ford Motor Co. CEO Alan Mulally also is traveling by car from Detroit for his second appearance before two legislative committees as the Detroit automakers seek $25 billion in government loans. Chrysler LLC CEO Robert Nardelli will not travel by corporate jet. A spokeswoman says his travel plans will remain secret for security reasons.

All three executives are returning to Congress for hearings on Thursday and Friday. They are seeking the bailout loans to help them through the recession and the worst sales downturn in 25 years.

Lawmakers criticized the CEOs last month for traveling in separate private jets to seek the loans.

In Tuesday morning trading, GM shares rose 30 cents, or 6.5 percent, to $4.89. Ford shares also jumped 30 cents, or 12 percent, to $2.85 after the company submitted its restructuring plan to Congress. The plans include cancelling all 2009 bonuses for global management and North American workers.

Ford said it hopes to restructure the company without accessing government loans, but promised CEO Mulally would work for $1 per year if the automaker did access funds. The company said it will sell its corporate aircraft, and is requesting access to up to $9 billion worth of bridge financing as part of its transformation plan.

Member Comments
View Comments: | 1-5 | Post a comment
dennie67
12-02-08 11:01 PM
I wonder if he sees himself for the *** that he is?

valleyconservative
12-02-08 10:07 PM
Ironically, people who have lost jobs at GM because GM moved their job to another country will have their tax dollars go to the bailout. That ***** hard folks.

autoworker
12-02-08 1:39 PM
its all a big act. they will resume their old ways with wasting company money as soon as they get their hands on that loan.

OutsideTheBox
12-02-08 12:08 PM
This is just the doggy jumping through hoops to please someone. Corporate spiffs should've been given up long ago - including those jets they suddenly want to sell. This is corporate Wallstreet at its best. Your problem shouldn't lie with keeping the stockholders happy - It lies with the working man whose job you shipped overseas and has no money here on our soil to buy your product. There's your missing money and failing economy!

VikingParent
12-02-08 12:00 PM
Why dont the car pool from Detroit to Washington. That would save them even more money.

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