Rep. Dingell: The Left and Right Agree GM Is 'the Worst Corporation in this Country'
*By Justin Chermol and Carlo Versano*
When General Motors announced a major restructuring that would result in mass layoffs and plant closures, the American automaker managed to do what few others have: unite the left and right in anger and disappointment.
Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-MI) represents a suburban Detroit district that will be affected by the reductions. She told Cheddar in an interview Wednesday that she was surprised by the timing, given that the auto industry is cyclical. Both Democrats and Republicans think "they are the worst corporation in this country."
"They have no fans right now," she said.
GM's newest strategy is twofold: the company is shrinking its sedan footprint in response to market conditions and consumer tastes, as well as investing in an electric, self-driving future it's terming "Zero Crashes, Zero Emissions, Zero Congestion."
Ford ($F), GM's main American rival, announced in April that it will scale about 90 percent of its auto production to trucks, utilities, and commercial vehicles by 2020. The company went on to explain that it would discontinue four of its sedan models and invest more in autonomous technology.
Back in June, in a cautionary note, GM [wrote](https://assets.bwbx.io/documents/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/rJBrNbApznVU/v0) to the Department of Commerce, warning increased tariffs could lead to a "smaller GM."
Despite its foresight, GM didn't cite tariffs as a reason for the layoffs in its statement Monday. Instead, CEO Mary Barra said almost the opposite ー that the economy was so strong that it would be preferable to make changes now rather than trying to restructure during a slowdown. Automakers learned that lesson the hard way during the financial crisis.
Dingell said that while she indicated to President Trump that she would support a "NAFTA 2.0" trade bill, she has changed her mind in the wake of GM's restructuring.
"I will not support a trade bill that lets that company put any more jobs in Mexico," she said. "We need to keep those jobs here in the United States."
After the announcement, [President Trump](https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1067494680416407552) and Prime Minister [Justin Trudeau](https://twitter.com/JustinTrudeau/status/1067082236686753792?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1067082236686753792&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnn.com%2F2018%2F11%2F26%2Fbusiness%2Fgm-oshawa-plant%2Findex.html) both took to Twitter to call reductions in the U.S. and Canada a massive "disappointment." Since then, the two leaders have spoken on the phone to discuss the issue.
While pundits and industry analysts debate whether the era of the personally-owned car is coming to an end ー and perhaps where American automakers fall in the new mobility hierarchy ー the effects of GM's decisions will still weigh heavily on local communities that depend on it as the anchor business. And that, in turn, makes it a political issue for the president. President Trump dispatched his chief economic adviser Larry Kudlow to meet with Barra.
As for the future of the auto-industry, Rep. Dingell said she understands the harsh realities her constituents are facing: "It's no longer a car industry, its a mobility industry. And the mobility industry is changing."
"The model is going to change but you are still going to be building vehicles and there will be new jobs," she said.
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California's new composting law will affect what residents do in their kitchens. As of this week, Californians will have to recycle excess food in an effort to reduce emissions caused by food waste. Cities and counties will turn recycled food into compost or use it as a renewable energy source. California's new law is the largest mandatory residential food waste recycling program in the country. Rachel Wagoner, Director of the California Department of Resources, Recycling and Recovery called the law 'the biggest change to trash' since recycling started in the 1980s. She joined Cheddar Climate to discuss.
As the U.S. comes up on the first anniversary of the January 6 insurrection.,A.C. Thompson, investigative reporter at ProPublica, joined Cheddar's Baker Machado to discuss updates to American Insurrection by FRONTLINE, ProPublica and Berkeley Journalism’s Investigative Reporting Program. The documentary investigates the attack on the Capitol touched off by the lie that the presidential election was stolen from Donald Trump but with new information gleaned since the event including interviews with lawmakers and law enforcement and the evolution of groups like the Boogaloo Boys and the Proud Boys behind the attack. "In some ways those groups that were kind of the vanguard of January 6 are maybe no longer relevant because their message is everywhere," he said.